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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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The Bantu–Romance Connection

A comparative investigation of verbal agreement, DPs, and information structure

Edited by Cécile De Cat and Katherine Demuth
University of Leeds / Brown University

2008. xix, 355 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 5514 3 / EUR 115.00 / USD 173.00
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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9067 0 / EUR 115.00 / USD 173.00
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This landmark volume is the first work specifically designed to explore the extent to which striking surface morpho-syntactic similarities between Bantu and Romance languages actually represent similar syntactic structures. In particular, it explores the timely and much debated issues of verbal morphology and agreement, the structure of DPs, and word order/information structure, with the goal of providing a better understanding of the structure of the different languages investigated, and the implications this holds for syntactic theory more generally. All of the papers draw on data from both Bantu and Romance languages, providing a framework for much-needed further comparative research on the nature of linguistic structure, its diversity and constraints, and the implications this has for learnability/acquisition. The volume also provides an important precedent for incorporating insights from Bantu linguistic structure into mainstream of syntax research.


Table of contents

Acknowledgments
vii
List of contributors
ix–x
Introduction
xi–xix
Part 1. Clitics and agreement
Concepts of structural underspecification in Bantu and Romance
Lutz Marten, Ruth Kempson and Miriam Bouzouita
3–39
On different types of clitic clusters
Anna Cardinaletti
41–82
Pronominal object markers in Romance and Bantu
Marie Labelle
83–109
The Bantu-Romance connection in verb movement and verbal inflectional morphology
Carolyn Harford
111–128
Part 2. The structure of DPs
DP in Bantu and Romance
Vicki Carstens
131–165
On the interpretability of φ-features
Roberto Zamparelli
167–199
Agreement and concord in nominal expressions
Giuliana Giusti
201–237
A unified syntactic analysis of Italian and Luganda nouns
Franca Ferrari-Bridgers
239–258
Part 3. Information structure
The fine structure of the Topic field
Mara Frascarelli
261–292
Focus at the interface: Evidence from Romance and Bantu
João Costa and Nancy C. Kula
293–322
Agreement in thetic VS sentences in Bantu and Romance
Jenneke van der Wal
323–350
Index of languages
351
General index
353–355