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Approaches to Hungarian. papers from the 2015 Leiden Conference / Volume 15 :

This volume contains a selection of papers from the 12th International Conference on the Structure of Hungarian (Leiden, 2015). The contributions cover a wide range of topics and their significance in generative theorizing. The papers about morphosyntax focus on the formation of comparative clauses,...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Otros Autores: Hulst, Harry van der, Lipták, Anikó
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Amsterdam : John Benjamins B.V., 2017.
Colección:Approaches to Hungarian ; 15.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Approaches to Hungarian; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; Introduction; Chapter 1. Internal-scope taking arguments in the information structure of deverbal nominals in Hungarian; 1. Introduction; 2. Internal- and external-scope readings in deverbal nominal constructions in Hungarian; 3. The syntactic structure of deverbal nominal constructions with designated thematic possessors and free possessors; 4. The syntactic structure of deverbal nominal constructions with internal-scope taking non-possessors; 5. Hybrid scope taking; 6. Conclusion; Acknowledgements; References
  • Chapter 2. Structural ambiguity and case assignment in Hungarian clausal and phrasal comparatives1. Introduction; 2. Ambiguity and case assignment with single predicates (Type I); 3. Ambiguity and case assignment with two predicates (Type II); 4. The proposal: Semantics and underlying syntactic structures; 5. Ellipsis; 6. Conclusion; Acknowledgements; References; Chapter 3. Two positions for verbal modifiers: Evidence from derived particle verbs; 1. Introduction; 2. Inseparable particle verbs; 3. Inseparable particles have some syntactic visibility
  • 3.1 Co-occurrence with preverbal bare objects3.2 Co-occurrence verbal particles; 3.3 Co-occurrence with resultatives; 4. Accounting for the inseparability of the particle; 4.1 Theoretical background; 4.2 The structure of inseparable particle verbs; 5. Accounting for the co-occurrence restrictions; 6. Consequences for argument structure; 7. Variation; 8. Conclusions; Acknowledgments; References; Chapter 4. A representational account of vowel harmony in terms of variable elements and licensing; 1. Introduction; 2. The framework; 3. Asymmetries in VH; 3.1 Opacity
  • 3.2 On the form and function of phonotactic constraints3.3 Context-free, context-sensitive and idiosyncratic neutralization; 3.4 Transparency; 3.4 A four-way typology; 4. Transparency and opacity revisited; 5. Bridge locality; 5.1 Unexpected transparency and opacity: The case of Khalkha (Mongolian); 5.2 Unexpected transparency of [a] in tongue root systems; 6. Concluding remarks; References; Chapter 5. Co-patterns, subpatterns and conflicting generalizations in Hungarian vowel harmony; 1. Introduction; 2. Background: Overview of variation in HVH; 3. The count effects: CE & PS
  • 4. Harmonic Uniformity5. Sequential Bias; 6. The structure of coexisting patterns in HVH; 7. Conclusion: Generalisations, co-patterns, subpatterns; Acknowledgements; References; Chapter 6. Measure constructions in Hungarian and the semantics of the -nyi suffix; 1. Introduction; 2. Measures with and without -nyi; 3. N-nyi is a measure head; 4. Conditions for the occurrence and non-occurrence of -nyi; 5. What is -nyi and what do -nyi phrases indicate?; 6.-nyi as an approximative operator; 7. Conclusions; Acknowledgements; References