* The ideas in this paper were first presented in a paper to the Linguistics Association of Great Britain conference in April 1999. It incorporates a number of suggestions made by participants, and has benefitted greatly from comments and bibliographical suggestions by David Denison. I am grateful to Chet Creider for drawing my attention to Malouf’s excellent dissertation, and for sharing in the development of the ideas, which he has applied to similar data from Swahili in Creider (1999). 1 Terminology varies from author to author. What I am calling simply ‘gerunds’ are of ten called ‘verbal gerunds’, in contrast with ‘nominal gerunds’ which I shall call nominalizations. The term ‘gerund’ is used quite differently in romance linguistics, where it refers to verb forms which I would call ‘present participles’. The term derives from Latin, where the form gerundum was in fact the gerund of the verb gerere, ‘to do’, so my usage is in line with that of traditional Latin grammars Gerunds and multiple default inheritance * RICHARD HUDSON Abstract In general, English gerunds such as (We were talking about) John having a sabbatical combine the internal characteristics of a clause with the external characteristics of a noun phrase. Previous analyses have tried to recognise the mixed character of gerunds by assigning them two separate nodes, one verbal and the other nominal, but all such analyses are problematic. This paper proposes an analysis similar to that of Malouf (1998) in which the verbal and nominal classifications are combined on a single node, and argues that the node can in fact inherit, by multiple default inheritance, from both the supercategories without any conflict. This is possible because ‘noun’ and ‘verb’ (as opposed to their respective sub-classes) place orthogonal restrictions on the phrase that they head: ‘noun’ restricts its external distribution, while ‘verb’ restricts its internal structure. (The analysis is expressed in terms of Word Grammar, so these facts are actually expressed in terms of dependencies: ‘noun’ and ‘verb’ appear only in restrictions on dependents and parents respectively.) The analysis is extended to explain some details of gerunds which confuse this very simple picture. On the one hand, a limited range of determiners is possible: a ‘possessive’ subject (e.g. about John’s having a sabbatical) or no in prohibitions or existentials (e.g. No playing loud music! There’s no mistaking that voice). And on the other hand, a very few constructions demand a gerund rather than a noun phrase (e.g. It’s no use..., They prevented us from...). 1 Introduction and overview One of the most troublesome areas of English grammar is illustrated in (1), which contains a gerund 1 , the word having: