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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Phrasal and Clausal Architecture

Syntactic derivation and interpretation

In honor of Joseph E. Emonds

Edited by Simin Karimi, Vida Samiian and Wendy K. Wilkins
University of Arizona / California State University / Michigan State University

2007. vi, 424 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 3365 3 / EUR 135.00 / USD 203.00
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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9292 6 / EUR 135.00 / USD 203.00
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The present collection includes papers that address a wide range of syntactic phenomena. In some, the authors discuss such major syntactic properties as clausal architecture, syntactic labels and derivation, and the nature of features and their role with respect to movement, agreement, and event-related constructions. In addition, several papers offer syntax-based discussions of aspects of acquisition, pedagogy, and neurolinguistics, addressing issues related to case marking, negation, thematic relations, and more. Several papers report on new findings relevant to less commonly investigated languages, and all provide valuable observations related to natural language syntactic properties, many of which are universal in their implications. The authors challenge several aspects of recent syntactic theory, broaden the applicable scope of others, and introduce important and provocative analyses that bear on current issues in linguistics.


Table of contents

Phrasal and clausal architecture

:

Syntactic description and interpretation

Simin Karimi, Vida Samiian and Wendy K. Wilkins
1–7
Restructuring and clausal architecture in Kannada
Brian Agbayani and Chandra Shekar
8–24
The position of adverbials
Mark Baltin
25–39
Bare, generic, mass, and referential Arabic DPs
Abdelkader Fassi Fehri
40–65
The possessor raising construction and the interpretation of subject
Nobuko Hasegawa
66–92
Syntactic labels and their derivations
Randall Hendrick
93–107
Separating “Focus Movement” from Focus
Julia Horvath
108–145
In search for Phases
Kyle Johnson
146–166
Wh-movement, interpretation, and optionality in Persian
Simin Karimi and Azita H. Taleghani
167–187

Structure preservingness, internal Merge, and the strict locality of triads

Jan Koster
188–205
Using description to teach (about) prescription
Anne Lobeck
206–220
‘More complicated and hence, rarer’: A look at grammatical complexity and cross-linguistic rarity
Frederick J. Newmeyer
221–242
Prescriptive grammar: Taking the long view
Rosemarie Whitney Ostler
243–261
The syntax of valuation and the interpretability of features
David Pesetsky and Esther Torrego
262–294
Linear sequencing strategies or UG-defined hierarchical structures in L2 acquisition?

A reply to Meisel

Bonnie D. Schwartz and Rex A. Sprouse
295–318
Minimalism vs. organic syntax
Anne Vainikka and Martha Young-Scholten
319–338
Location and locality
Henk van Riemsdijk and Riny Huijbregts
339–364
Conceptual space
Jennie L. Wakefield and Wendy K. Wilkins
365–395
‘Adjunct theta-roles’ and the configurational determination of roles
Karen Zagona
396–411
Author index
412–416
Subject index
417–423