- PRO (linguistics)
PRO (pronounced "big pro", to distinguish it from pro, pronounced "little/small pro") is an empty category whose existence is postulated in classical
Government and Binding Theory . There are two independent pieces of evidence for its existence: theExtended Projection Principle (which says that all clauses must have a subject) and theta criterion (which says that every argument a verb can assign must be realized):*I persuaded John [PRO to read Al Gore's latest book]
In the example above, PRO serves as the subject of the non-finite subclause [to read Al Gore's latest book] , thereby satisfying the EPP-feature of T (occupied ty the infinitival 'to'). Since it is an object control sentence, 'John' is the antecedent of PRO, they are co-indexed.
The interpretation of PRO may be either dependent on another noun phrase (like
anaphor s) or arbitrary (likepronominal s). That is why in terms of features PRO may be described as [+anaphor, +pronominal] . However, this set of features would pose a problem for Binding Theory: an anaphor must be bound in its governing category, whereas a pronominal must be free (in its governing category). The solution that Chomsky proposed was the so called PRO Theorem: PRO must be ungoverned. In other words, PRO cannot be governed and that is why it cannot have its governing category.In recent literature (Chomsky 1999, Radford 2004) the existence of PRO has been argued for without the help of the PRO Theorem and the government theory. It is posited that PRO is in complementary distribution to overt subjects because it is the only item that is able to check "null case" from an infinite T, namely the 'to' in control infinitives. By positing this, the problems arising from the PRO Theorem are avoided. The problem was that PRO serves as the subject of the control clause and must, as such, be case-marked. However, following the traditional G&B-framework, case-marking only applies under government. Thus, PRO could not be case-marked since it must be ungoverned. If PRO receives null-case, it is licensed to appear in subject position.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.