Minimalism and beyond : radicalizing the interfaces /
The problem pursued in this paper concerns the role of Arbitrariness in linguistic expressions. Saussurean Arbitrariness is due to the conventional sound-meaning-relation of linguistic expressions. It is systematically projected (but not reduced) from Lexical Items to linguistic expressions of unres...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Otros Autores: | , , , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam ; Philadelphia :
John Benjamins Publishing Company,
2014.
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Colección: | Language faculty and beyond ;
11. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Minimalism and Beyond; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; Preface; List of contributors; I. Minimalism: Quo Vadis?; A program for the Minimalist Program; 1. Introduction; 2. The reduction of long distance grammatical interactions to chain relations; 3. Deriving the properties of chains; 4. What's new?; 5. Conclusion; Notes; References; II. Exploring features in syntax; On feature interpretability and inheritance; Notes; References; On the need for formal features in the narrow syntax; 1. Formal features: Can we live without them?; 2. Roots vs. affixes: A comparison
- 2.1 The semantic flexibility of roots2.2 Position; 2.3 The nature of RLex-features; 3. F-features: Are they all post-syntactic in nature?; 3.1 F-features in the narrow syntax: Clitic vs. non-clitic alternations in French and the PCC6; 3.2 F-features in the narrow syntax: Evidence from CA; 4. Conclusions and directions for future investigations; Notes; References; Adjunct Control and edge features; 1. Introduction; 2. Previous approaches within the Movement Theory of Control; 2.1 Sideward Movement and Merge-over-Move; 2.2 Adjunct control in Portuguese and parasitic gaps; 2.3 Summary
- 3. Towards an analysis of adjunct control in Portuguese3.1 The nature of finite T in BP; 3.2 Adjunct control and the locus of edge features; 4. Further extensions: Null possessors in Portuguese; 5. Concluding remarks; Notes; References; On the uninterpretability of interpretable features; 1. Introduction; 1.1 A universal set of formal features?; 1.2 Syntactic and semantic properties of formal features; 1.3 Outline and scope; 2. Acquiring formal features; 2.1 Proposal; 2.2 Example: Negative Concord; 3. Interpreting interpretable features; 3.1 Theoretical problems; 3.2 Empirical problems
- 3.2.1 Non-negative contexts checking [uNEG]3.2.2 Negative contexts that cannot check [uNEG]; 3.3 Proposal; 4. Conclusions; References; The Merge Condition; 1. Introduction; 2. Agree as a condition on Merge; 2.1 Reverse Agree; 2.2 Selection via Reverse Agree; 2.3 Ellipsis; 2.4 Selection as part of syntactic structure building; 2.5 Feature valuation as a (Last Resort) condition on Merge; 3. Agree and other cases of complementation; 3.1 Complement selection; 3.2 Clausal complementation in English and German; 3.3 Embedded root clauses
- Merge at Transfer; 4. Conclusions
- Quo vadis?; Notes