@article{oai:kgwu.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000312, author = {羽鳥, 百合子 and HATORI, Yuriko}, issue = {1}, journal = {川村学園女子大学研究紀要, The journal of Kawamura Gakuen Woman's University}, month = {Mar}, note = {Japanese psychological phrasal expressions represented by kimoti o nagomaseru show several interesting properties that require a proper explanation. Hasegawa (2001) takes a purely syntactic approach to account for both the non-agentive status of the subject and the accusative case marking of the object. In contrast, the present paper takes a lexical semantic approach following the analysis given by Kageyama (2002) with respect to what he calls 'non-accusative causative verbs'. It is shown that there are three types of kimoti o nagomaseru type expressions which behave differently and that Hasegawa's syntactic approach cannot explain these differences properly., Japanese psychological phrasal expressions represented by kimoti o nagomaseru show several interesting properties that require a proper explanation. Hasegawa (2001) takes a purely syntactic approach to account for both the non-agentive status of the subject and the accusative case marking of the object. In contrast, the present paper takes a lexical semantic approach following the analysis given by Kageyama (2002) with respect to what he calls 'non-accusative causative verbs'. It is shown that there are three types of kimoti o nagomaseru type expressions which behave differently and that Hasegawa's syntactic approach cannot explain these differences properly.}, pages = {1--12}, title = {非動作主主語と外項 : 「気持ちを和ませる」表現をめぐって}, volume = {15}, year = {2004}, yomi = {ハトリ, ユリコ} }