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Parameters of Slavic morphosyntax /

Focusing on issues of case theory and comparative grammar, this study treats selected problems in the syntax of the Slavic languages from the perspective of Government-Binding theory. Steven Franks seeks to develop parametric solutions to related constructions among the various Slaviclanguages. A mo...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Franks, Steven
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: New York : Oxford University Press, 1995.
Colección:Oxford studies in comparative syntax.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • 1. Introduction; 1.1. Theoretical Preliminaries; 1.1.1. The Modular Conception of Grammar; 1.1.2. Levels and Components; 1.1.3. Subsystems of Principles; 1.1.4. The Categorial Component; 1.2. Case Theory; 1.2.1. Principles of Abstract Case; 1.2.2. Case Assignment; 2. Matrices, Indices, and Morphosyntactic Features; 2.1. A Model of Morphological Case; 2.1.1. Case Submatrices; 2.1.2. Coindexation; 2.1.3. Phase Structural Case; 2.2. Russian Case Features; 2.2.1. Excursus on Jakobson's Features; 2.2.2. Revising Jakobson's System; 3. Across-the-Board Dependencies; 3.1. Case-Matching.
  • 3.2. Parallelism in Prominence3.2.1. The Nature of the Parallelism; 3.2.2. The Scope of Prominence Effects; 3.2.3. Some Possible Extensions; 3.3. The Parasitic Gap Analysis; 3.3.1. Similarities; 3.3.2. Differences; 3.4. Conclusion; 4. Quantified Structures: Russian versus Serbo-Croatian; 4.1. Case Properties of Numeral Phrases; 4.1.1. Babby's Analysis of Russian; 4.1.2. Extending the Analysis: Gen(Q) Is Inherent in Serbo-Croatian; 4.1.3. Characterizing the Structural/Inherent Dichotomy; 4.2. The Category of Numeral Phrases; 4.2.1. Pesetsky's Analysis of Russian.
  • 4.2.2. Extending the Analysis: Serbo-Croatian Numeral Phrases Are NPs4.2.3. Some Semantic Issues; 4.3. The Distribution of Numeral Phrases; 4.3.1. The Internal Subject Hypothesis; 4.3.2. The NP/QP Dichotomy Revisited; 5. Quantified Structures: Polish and Other Puzzles; 5.1. West Slavic and the Accusative Restriction; 5.1.1. Polish Numeral Phrases; 5.1.2. Numeral Phrases in Other Languages; 5.2. More Quantified Expressions; 5.2.1. Distributive Po-Phrases and the Structure of DP; 5.2.2. Approximative Inversion; 5.2.3. Frozen Quantifiers; 5.3. Bare Genitives; 5.3.1. Empty Quantifier Structures.
  • 5.3.2. The Genitive of Negation6. Secondary Predication; 6.1. Predicate Adjectives; 6.1.1. Three Types of Predicate Adjective; 6.1.2. On Agreement; 6.1.3. Clausal Functional Projections; 6.2. Secondary Predication and Control; 6.2.1. Case Transmission; 6.2.2. Factors Blocking Case Transmission; 6.2.3. Control Theory and Agreement; 6.3. The Second Dative; 6.3.1. The Agreement Analysis; 6.3.2. A Phrase Structural Analysis; 6.3.3. Gerunds and Participles; 6.4. Parametric Variation; 6.4.1. Non-Agreeing Semipredicatives; 6.4.2. Dative Subjects; 6.4.3. Secondary Predication in Polish.
  • 7. Null Subject Phenomena7.1. The ""Pro-Drop"" Parameter; 7.1.1. Types of Null Subjects; 7.1.2. Parametric Approaches; 7.1.3. Summary of Slavic Facts; 7.1.4. Two Sides of Visibility; 7.2. Null Thematic Subjects; 7.2.1. Case and Agreement; 7.2.2. Ellipsis; 7.2.3. Why Russian Is Different; 7.3. Expletives and Visibility; 7.3.1. Null Expletives Do Not Need Case; 7.3.2. Overt Expletives Need Case at S-Structure; 7.3.3. Different Kinds of Null Expletives; 7.4. Overt Expletives in Slavic; 7.4.1. Russian; 7.4.2. South and West Slavic; 7.5. Conclusion: Arbitrary Third Plural Subjects.