This volume makes a case for a critical reassessment of the wide-spread view that syntax can be reduced to tree structures, arguing for concepts that are defined in terms of linear order. By connecting the descriptive tools of modern phrase-structure grammar with traditional descriptive scholarship, Andreas Kathol offers a new perspective on many long-standing problems in syntactic theory.
This volume makes a case for a critical reassessment of the wide-spread view that syntax can be reduced to tree structures, arguing for concepts that are defined in terms of linear order. By connecting the descriptive tools of modern phrase-structure grammar with traditional descriptive scholarship, Andreas Kathol offers a new perspective on many long-standing problems in syntactic theory.
Andreas Kathol is Assistant Professor in the Department of Linguistics, University of California at Berkeley. He obtained his Doctorate at the Ohio State University (1995) and held a postdoctoral research fellowship at the University of Groningen (1995-6).
Inhaltsangabe
1: Introductory Remarks 2: Some Basic Concepts of HPSG 3: Formal Models of Syntactic Discontinuity 4: Topological Fields 5: Complementizers and Verb Placement 6: Left-Peripheral Structures 7: Sentence Type Determination 8: Syntax of the Verb Cluster 9: Beyond German References
1: Introductory Remarks 2: Some Basic Concepts of HPSG 3: Formal Models of Syntactic Discontinuity 4: Topological Fields 5: Complementizers and Verb Placement 6: Left-Peripheral Structures 7: Sentence Type Determination 8: Syntax of the Verb Cluster 9: Beyond German References
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