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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Minimal Ideas

Syntactic studies in the minimalist framework

Edited by Werner Abraham, Samuel David Epstein, Höskuldur Thráinsson and Jan-Wouter Zwart
University of Groningen / Harvard University / University of Iceland / University of Groningen

1996. xii, 364 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 2732 4 / EUR 130.00
978 1 55619 230 2 / USD 195.00
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PaperbackIn stock
978 90 272 2733 1 / EUR 36.00
978 1 55619 231 9 / USD 54.00

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The articles in this volume are inspired by the Minimalist Program first outlined in Chomsky’s MIT Fall term class lectures of 1991 and in his seminal paper “A Minimalist Program for Linguistic Theory”. The articles seek to develop further some key idea in the Minimalist Program, sometimes in ways deviating from the course taken by Chomsky.
The articles are preceded by a 40 page introduction into the minimalist framework. The introduction pays special attention to the question how the minimalist framework developed out of the Principles and Parameters (Government and Binding) framework. The introduction serves as a guide through the entire volume, presenting the issues to be discussed in the articles in detail, and offering a thematic overview over the volume as a whole.
Most of the articles in this volume are concerned with issues raised in Chomsky’s first two minimalist papers, namely “A Minimalist Program for Linguistic Theory” (1993, first distributed in 1992) and “Bare Phrase Structure” (1995a, first distributed 1994). In acknowledgment of this, each article starts out with a quote from Chomsky (1993, 1995a). This quote also serves to highlight the particular grammatical or theoretical issue that is primarily discussed in the relevant article.
Several articles relate issues raised in Chomsky’s first two minimalist papers to the basic ideas in Kayne’s book, The Antisymmetry of Syntax (1994, distributed in part in manuscript form in 1993). In many respects, therefore, these articles develop alternatives to ideas proposed in chapter 4, “Categories and Transformations,” of Chomsky’s most recent book, The Minimalist Program (1995b). Some of the articles contain references to chapter 4, and some comments on similarities and differences between ideas developed in these papers and in chapter 4 of Chomsky 1995b can also be found in the Introduction to this volume.


Table of contents

Bibliographical Information
vii
List of Contributors
ix
Preface
xi
Introduction
Samuel David Epstein, Höskuldur Thráinsson and Jan-Wouter Zwart
1
The Minimal Links of Verb (Projection) Raising
Marcel den Dikken
67
Shortest Move and Object Case Checking
K. Scott Ferguson
97
Spell-Out at the LF Interface
Erich Groat and John O’Neil
113
The Typology of Syntactic Positions: L-Relatedness and the A/Ā -distinction
Liliane Haegeman
141
Clause Structure, Expletives and Verb Movement
Dianne Jonas
167
Raising Quantifiers without Quantifier Raising
Hisatsugu Kitahara
189
Optional Movement in the Minimalist Program
Geoffrey Poole
199
Morphology and Word Order in Germanic Languages
Jaume Solà
217
On the (Non-) Universality of Functional Categories
Höskuldur Thráinsson
253
Participles and Bare Argument Structure
Guido Vanden Wyngaerd
283
“Shortest Move” versus “Fewest Steps”
Jan-Wouter Zwart
305
References
329
Index
347