“…because preverbal subjects usually represent discourse-old information (Prince 1992), whereas indefinites introduce discourse-new referents (Brasoveanu & Farkas 2016; on PA subjects see Carlier 2000, Vogeleer & Tasmowski 2005. To do so, we will use the notion of referential givenness (Gundel 2003), which involves concepts like familiarity for definite description (Heim 1982), specificity (Enc ß 1991), referentiality (Fodor & Sag 1982), and the hearer-old/new and discourse old/new statuses of Prince (1992). Importantly, referential givenness/newness is logically independent from relational givenness/newness, that is, the relation between topics/themes and comments/rhemes mentioned in Section 4.2.1, although there may be a connection between the two types of givenness/newness (e.g., 'definiteness/ presupposition' effect of topics in Japanese and Korean, Kuno 1972, Kuroda 1965, mentioned in Gundel & Fretheim 2004.…”