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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Rightward Movement

Edited by Dorothee Beermann, David LeBlanc and Henk van Riemsdijk
University of Tilburg

1997. vi, 410 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 2738 6 / EUR 135.00
978 1 55619 901 1 / USD 203.00
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Symmetries and asymmetries have always played an important role in linguistic theorizing. From the early works on potentially universal properties of transformational processes, differences between rightward and leftward movement processes were noted and constituted a challenge to theories of conditions on transformations. The upward boundedness of extraposition rules vs. the successive cyclic character of question word movement, for example, remains a vexing problem. An idea which has gained considerable prominence in the most recent syntactic work, in particular Noam Chomsky's 'Minimalist Program' and Richard Kayne's 'Antisymmetry' proposal, is that rightward movement simply does not exist. This means, in essence, that what looks like an element that has been moved rightward is either base-generated in its surface position, or it is actually moved leftward but all its surrounding materials have been moved leftward even further. Clearly, these radical proposals have generated a large number of new analyses of the relevant phenomena, and they have fostered considerable controversy about the viability and desirability of this type of approach. The present volume brings together a representative group of articles discussing a variety of aspects of (apparent) rightward movement processes, including considerations having to do with parsing, and representing the various opposing lines of thought on this matter. Empirically, they cover a wide array of constructions (extraposition, scrambling, quantifier-floating, etc.) and languages ( American Sign Language, Bengali, Dutch, French, Frisian, German, Hindi, Japanese, Marathi, etc.).


Table of contents

Preface
Henk van Riemsdijk, Dorothee Beermann and David LeBlanc
1
Motivating Non-directional Movement
Carl Alphonce and Henry Davis
7
CP-Extraposition as Argument Shift
Josef Bayer
37
The Kayne Mutiny
Daniel Büring and Katharina Hartmann
59
Morphological strenght: NP positions in French
Frank Drijkoningen
81
Extraposition
Hubert Haider
115
Analysing Linear Asymmetries in the Verb Clusters of Dutch and Frisian and their Dialects
Eric Hoekstra
153
Movement in Japanese Relative Clauses
Satoshi Stanley Koike
171
Rightward Scrambling
Anoop K. Mahajan
185
Extraposition as Remnant Movement
Gereon Müller
215
Rightward WH-Movement in American Sign Language
Carol Neidle, Judy Anne Kegl, Benjamin Bahan, Debra Aarons and Dawn MacLaughlin
247
Deriving Dependent Right Adjuncts in English
Michael S. Rochemont and Peter W. Culicover
279
On Movement and One-Pass No Backtrack Parsing
Chris Sijtsma
301
Language Types and Generative Grammar: a Review of Some Consequences of the Universal VO Hypothesis
Caterina Donati and Alessandra Tomaselli
331
Extraposition, Identification and Precedence
Martina Wiltschko
357
Index
397
Index of Languages
402
Index of Cited Authors
403
Adresses of the Authors
404