A feature-based syntax of functional categories : the structure, acquisition, and specific impairment of functional systems /
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
---|---|
Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Berlin ; New York :
Mouton de Gruyter,
©2005.
|
Colección: | Studies in generative grammar ;
79. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Chapter 1: Introduction
- 1. Aims and approach
- 2. Elements of Minimalist syntax
- 3. Feature-based projection of functional categories
- Chapter 2: A feature-based derivation of functional heads
- 1. The syntactic utility of functional heads
- 2. Derived functional heads
- 2.1. Derived functional heads in the literature
- 2.2. Feature matrices and constraints
- 2.3. Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 3: Germanic verb-second and expletive subjects
- 1. Patterns of Germanic verb-second
- 2. Expletive subjects
- 3. Verb-second and the Top domain in Old English and Middle English3.1. Early English verb-second
- 3.2. A feature-based account of Old and Middle English verb-second
- 3.3. Middle English dialects and language change
- 3.4. Streamlining accounts of Old English word order below the TOPIC domain
- Notes
- Chapter 4: Aspects of clitic placement and clitic climbing
- 1. Head movement accounts of clitic placement
- 2. Verb and clitic movement
- 2.1. Mechanics of clitic placement in Italian and Spanish
- 2.2. Clitic placement in French
- 2.3. Imperatives
- 2.4. The orders of multiple object clitics in Modern Greek3. Problems with clitic climbing in a feature-based syntax
- 4. A feature-based approach to clitic climbing
- 4.1. Restructuring
- 4.2. Mechanics of clitic climbing with feature-derived functional categories
- 4.3. Some properties of clitic climbing
- 4.4. Other accounts of clitic climbing
- 4.5. Clitic climbing out of finite clauses in Salentino
- 5. Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 5: Tenseless clauses and coordination
- 1. Accusative subject conjuncts
- 1.1. Properties of the accusative subject conjunct construction1.2. The structure of coordination in the ASC construction
- 1.3. The internal structure of the ASC clause
- 2. Small clause complements of perception verbs
- 2.1. The ASC-like structure of “Bare Infinitive� complements
- 2.2. Higginbotham�s (1983) account
- Notes
- Chapter 6: The acquisition of functional features
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Preliminaries
- 2.1. Feature projection versus functional category adjunction
- 2.2. The present study
- 3. Results
- 3.1. Peter
- 3.2. Nina
- 3.3. Naomi4. Discussion and conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 7: The acquisition of adult functional categories
- 1. Theories and predictions
- 1.1. Strong continuity accounts
- 1.2. Radford�s maturational theory
- 1.3. Induction
- 1.4. Bottom-up structure building accounts
- 1.5. Feature-based theory of functional categories
- 1.6. Processing capacity, working memory, and phrase structure complexity
- 2. Procedures
- 2.1. Counting functional categories
- 2.2. Size normalization and nominative subject filtering