Challenging clitics /
In Old French, all clitic clusters containing objects observed the order ACC-DAT. During the 15th and 16th centuries this order was changed into DAT-ACC in cases where objects of the 1st and 2nd person were involved. This change took place rather abruptly. In this paper I will argue that increased u...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Otros Autores: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam :
John Benjamins Publishing Company,
2013.
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Colección: | Linguistik aktuell ;
Bd. 206. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Challenging Clitics; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of Contents; Acknowledgements; Why challenging clitics?; Some introductory remarks; Christine Meklenborg Salvesen & Hans Petter Helland; Enclisis at the syntax-PF interface; Marios Mavrogiorgos; Clisis revisited; Root and embedded contexts in Western Iberian*; Francisco José Fernández-Rubiera; Handling Wolof clitics in LFG; Cheikh M. Bamba Dione; Clitic placement and grammaticalization in Portuguese*; Filomena Sandalo & Charlotte Galves; Diachronic source of two cliticization patterns in Slavic*; Krzysztof Migdalski.
- The Freezing Principle in Hungarian polarity, non-polarity and multiple wh-questions*Gréte Dalmi; Pronominal markers in Cajun French*; Francine Alice Girard; The morphosyntax of -nde and post-verbal clitics in Cypriot Greek; Natalia Pavlou & Phoevos Panagiotidis; Acquisition of Italian object clitics by a trilingual child*; Acquisition of Italian object clitics; Elizaveta Khachaturyan; Clitic clusters in early Italo-Romance and the syntax/phonology interface; Diego Pescarini; Reflexive verbs and the restructuring of clitic clusters; Christine Meklenborg Salvesen; Acknowledgements.
- Why challenging clitics?1. Introduction; 2. Clitics as a linguistic object; 2.1 Words, clitics and affixes; 2.2 Simple clitics and special clitics; 2.3 The position of clitics; 2.4 Thematic arguments or functional heads?; 2.4.1 Clitics as D0s; 2.4.2 Clitics as functional heads; 2.5 Clitics and phases; 3. The subject cycle; 3.1 The subject pronoun in French; 4. The interest of this volume; 4.1 The derivation of clitic structures; 4.2 Finiteness and phases; 4.3 Clitics in LFG; 4.4 Clitics in Distributed Morphology; 4.5 Slavic clitics and the TP projection; 4.6 Interrogative clitics.
- 4.7 Clitics or affixes?4.8 The acquisition of clitics; 4.9 Clitic clusters; 5. Conclusion; References; Enclisis at the syntax-PF interface; 1. The proclisis-enclisis alternation; 1.1 Introduction; 1.2 Proclisis and enclisis in finiteness sensitive and Tobler-Mussafia languages; 1.2.1 Overview of the data; 1.2.2 Past analyses; 2. V-movement analysis as a purely PF or syntactic account; 2.1 Against a pure PF account; 2.2 Against a pure syntactic account; 2.3 V-movement across the cliticization site: What is syntax and what is PF?; 3. V-movement to a V-related head: The role of PF.
- 3.1 The finiteness factor in finiteness sensitive languages3.2 Non-finite enclisis in Tobler-Mussafia languages; 3.3 Finite enclisis in Tobler-Mussafia languages; 4. Summary and conclusions; References; Clisis revisited; 1. Enclisis and proclisis in Western Iberian Romance languages; 1.1 Enclisis and proclisis in the matrix context in Western Iberian Romance languages; 1.2 Enclisis and proclisis in the finite embedded context in Asturian; 2. Previous approaches to enclisis and proclisis alternations; 2.1 Phonological approaches to enclisis and proclisis alternations.