1 SE-marked directed motion constructions: anticausatives and figure reflexives * Grant Armstrong University of Wisconsin-Madison This paper discusses the descriptive properties of SE-marked directed motion constructions typically instantiated by verbs such as caer-se (fall-se), ir-se (go-se) or subir-se (go up-se). It is argued that such constructions are surface representations of two distinct underlying syntactic constructions: an anticausative (Schäfer 2008) and a figure reflexive (Wood 2014). The anticausative analysis corroborates work on the same topic by Cuervo (2014), Jiménez-Fernández & Tubino (2014) and Pineda (2016) while the figure reflexive analysis is a novel contribution. 1. Introduction Aspectual SE is the name commonly given to the reflexive clitic that may appear with some transitive and intransitive verbs in Spanish, giving rise to telic interpretations (Nishida 1994; Zagona 1996; De Miguel 1999; De Miguel & Fernández Lagunilla 2000; Sanz 2000; MacDonald 2004, to appear; De Cuyper 2006; Basilico 2010; Armstrong 2013; García Fernández 2015). Much work has focused on how the aspectual effects of SE arise in transitive verbs like comer-se (eat-SE) while only recently have intransitive verbs of directed motion such as caer-se (fall-SE), ir-se (go- SE) and salir-se (leave-SE) been looked at in detail (Cuervo 2014; Jiménez-Fernández & Tubino 2014; García Fernández 2015; Pineda 2016). In this paper, I build on this recent line of investigation into the structure of SE-marked intransitive motion verbs and add to some of the claims made therein. I do this by integrating into these proposals work on expletive Voice by Schäfer (2008) and work on PPs by Svenonius (2007) and Wood (2014). * I thank the audience at HLS 2015 (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign) as well as the anonymous reviewers of an earlier manuscript for critical commentary and feedback on earlier versions of this work. All errors are mine.