Nicht lieferbar

Studies in Comparative Germanic Syntax
Proceedings from the 15th Workshop on Comparative Germanic Syntax (Groningen, May 26-27, 2000)
Versandkostenfrei!
Nicht lieferbar
Main description:This volume presents a collection of articles reporting on new research carried out within the theoretical framework of generative grammar on the comparative syntax of the Germanic languages.Divided in four main sections, the book focuses on issues of subordination and complementation (with emphasis on German/Dutch and Danish), displacement phenomena discussed in relation with richness of morphology (with special attention to English, German/Dutch, and Norwegian, as well as presenting more general discussion of the issue), language variation and change (studying historical Eng...
Main description:
This volume presents a collection of articles reporting on new research carried out within the theoretical framework of generative grammar on the comparative syntax of the Germanic languages.
Divided in four main sections, the book focuses on issues of subordination and complementation (with emphasis on German/Dutch and Danish), displacement phenomena discussed in relation with richness of morphology (with special attention to English, German/Dutch, and Norwegian, as well as presenting more general discussion of the issue), language variation and change (studying historical English syntax and Frisian contact dialects), and the syntax-semantics interface viewed from a Germanic perspective (addressing ellipsis, reflexivity, and the behavior of quantifiers).
Table of contents:
- Introduction
- List of contributors
- Subordination
- Wh-movement and integrated parenthetical constructions
- Van as a marker of dissociation
- Expletive subjects in subject relative clauses
- Syntactic versus semantic control
- Movement and Morphology
- Parametric variation and scrambling in English
- V2 and Holmberg's Generalization
- The distribution of declarative verb second in Germanic
- A verb's gotta do what a verb's gotta do!
- On the correlation between morphology and syntax
- Language Variation and Change
- Observations on the loss of Verb Second in the history of English
- A structure-based analysis of morphosyntactic regularities in language contact
- Syntax and Semantics
- Swiping in Germanic
- The ambiguity of weak reflexive pronouns in English and German
- 6;Binominal each-constructions' (BECs) in German and English
- References
- Name index
- Subject index
This volume presents a collection of articles reporting on new research carried out within the theoretical framework of generative grammar on the comparative syntax of the Germanic languages.
Divided in four main sections, the book focuses on issues of subordination and complementation (with emphasis on German/Dutch and Danish), displacement phenomena discussed in relation with richness of morphology (with special attention to English, German/Dutch, and Norwegian, as well as presenting more general discussion of the issue), language variation and change (studying historical English syntax and Frisian contact dialects), and the syntax-semantics interface viewed from a Germanic perspective (addressing ellipsis, reflexivity, and the behavior of quantifiers).
Table of contents:
- Introduction
- List of contributors
- Subordination
- Wh-movement and integrated parenthetical constructions
- Van as a marker of dissociation
- Expletive subjects in subject relative clauses
- Syntactic versus semantic control
- Movement and Morphology
- Parametric variation and scrambling in English
- V2 and Holmberg's Generalization
- The distribution of declarative verb second in Germanic
- A verb's gotta do what a verb's gotta do!
- On the correlation between morphology and syntax
- Language Variation and Change
- Observations on the loss of Verb Second in the history of English
- A structure-based analysis of morphosyntactic regularities in language contact
- Syntax and Semantics
- Swiping in Germanic
- The ambiguity of weak reflexive pronouns in English and German
- 6;Binominal each-constructions' (BECs) in German and English
- References
- Name index
- Subject index