Zeijlstra, HeddeHeddeZeijlstra2018-11-072018-11-072013https://resolver.sub.uni-goettingen.de/purl?gro-2/29249In this article, I provide a unified explanation for two puzzling phenomena concerning sentence-initial negation: the ban on True Negative Imperatives that is attested in many languages and the ban on sole negative markers in sentence-initial position in V-to-C languages. I argue that both phenomena can be explained once it is assumed after Han (2001) that operators encoding the illocutionary force of a speech act take scope from matrix C-a similar to and may not be outscoped by negation. Consequently, a morphosyntactically negative element can appear in a position in C-a similar to or SpecCP only if it is semantically non-negative or if it can reconstruct to a lower position.Not in the first placejournal_article10.1007/s11049-013-9199-3000322118700007