This paper discusses the very general question of how syntactic features of individual languages relate to the universal set of syntactic features. It is pointed out that Chomsky’s approach (2001a) to this fundamental issue is paradoxical. On one hand he argues that language is uniform in the relevant sense (L-uniformity), but, on the other hand, he also assumes that languages make different selections of features from a universal feature set (L-selection). The paper argues strongly that L-uniformity is the only conceivable possibility. However, if that is correct, a great deal of what languages have is common is ‘silence’, that is, categories that are present in Narrow Syntax but silent in PF. In other words, language has innate elements and structures irrespective of whether or how they are overtly expressed. It follows that language variation is to a substantial extent ‘silence variation’, that is, much of it boils down to languages being explicit vs. silent about different (syntactically active) categories. This claim is coined as the Silence Principle, saying that any meaningful feature of language may be silent.
Sebold, Maria Mercedes Riveiro Quintans & Thaís da Silveira Neves Araújo
2021. Realização dos traços de duratividade na perífrase 'estar+gerúndio' no espanhol de Santiago do Chile e no espanhol de Madrid. Diacrítica 35:1 ► pp. 54 ff.
Hughes, Thomas J.
2020. Deixis, demonstratives, and definite descriptions. Thought: A Journal of Philosophy 9:4 ► pp. 285 ff.
Pineda, Anna
2020. Double‐Object Constructions in Romance: The Common Denominator. Syntax 23:3 ► pp. 203 ff.
Pineda, Anna
2021. The Role of SE and NE in Romance Verbs of Directed Motion: Evidence from Catalan, Italian, Aragonese and Spanish Varieties. In Unraveling the complexity of SE [Studies in Natural Language and Linguistic Theory, 99], ► pp. 265 ff.
Frascarelli, Mara & Ángel L. Jiménez‐Fernández
2019. Understanding Partiality in pro‐Drop Languages: An Information‐Structure Approach. Syntax 22:2-3 ► pp. 162 ff.
2015. The force of V2 revisited. The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics 18:2 ► pp. 139 ff.
Liao, Wei-wen Roger
2015. On modification with whole/zheng in English and Chinese and the uniformity of syntax. Journal of East Asian Linguistics 24:1 ► pp. 53 ff.
Rouveret, Alain
2015. Références bibliographiques. In Arguments minimalistes,
Hughes, Thomas J. & J. T. M. Miller
2014. Lexicalisation and the Origin of the Human Mind. Biosemiotics 7:1 ► pp. 11 ff.
Burton-Roberts, Noel
2011. On the grounding of syntax and the role of phonology in human cognition. Lingua 121:14 ► pp. 2089 ff.
Calabrese, Andrea
2011. Investigations on markedness, syncretism and zero exponence in morphology. Morphology 21:2 ► pp. 283 ff.
LOHNDAL, TERJE
2011. Freezing effects and objects. Journal of Linguistics 47:1 ► pp. 163 ff.
Holmberg, Anders
2010. Parameters in minimalist theory: The case of Scandinavian. Theoretical Linguistics 36:1 ► pp. 1 ff.
Holmberg, Anders
2017. Universal Grammar. In The Cambridge Handbook of Historical Syntax, ► pp. 275 ff.
Lohndal, Terje & Juan Uriagereka
2010. The logic of parametric theories. Theoretical Linguistics 36:1 ► pp. 69 ff.
Sigurðsson, Halldór Ármann
2010. On EPP effects*. Studia Linguistica 64:2 ► pp. 159 ff.
Sigurðsson, Halldór Ármann
2011. Conditions on Argument Drop. Linguistic Inquiry 42:2 ► pp. 267 ff.
Sigurðsson, Halldór Ármann
2012. Case variation: Viruses and star wars. Nordic Journal of Linguistics 35:3 ► pp. 313 ff.
Sigurðsson, Halldór Ármann
2012. Minimalist C/case. Linguistic Inquiry 43:2 ► pp. 191 ff.
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