Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

Bøker i Oxford Studies in Comparative Syntax-serien

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  • - New Comparative Studies
     
    1 534,-

    These articles focus on clause structure, clitic placement, word order variation, pronominal system, verb movement, quantification, and distribution of particles. They are written within the "principles and parameters" framework and contrast Portuguese with other Romance languages.

  • - New Comparative Studies
     
    1 122,-

    These articles focus on clause structure, clitic placement, word order variation, pronominal system, verb movement, quantification, and distribution of particles. They are written within the "principles and parameters" framework and contrast Portuguese with other Romance languages.

  •  
    1 945,-

    The Romance Languages document remarkable variations in subject word order in different constructions, and have various restrictions in their occurrence. This volume does not attempt to create a consensus, but tries to represent and bring into dialogue the different sides of the debate.

  • - On the Syntax of Verb-Particle, Triadic and Causative Constructions
    av Marcel den Dikken
    1 372 - 2 563,-

    The author investigates the distribution and placement of verbal particles, which are words that do not change their form through inflection and do not fit easily into the established system of parts of speech. He analyses data from Norwegian, English, Dutch, German, and other languages.

  • av Katalin E. (Professor of Linguistics Kiss
    2 306,-

    This volume brings together twelve previously unpublished case studies of languages in which either topic and focus (or both) are configurationally encoded, i.e. languages in which those two notions are controlled by the syntactic structure of the language, if at all. Taken together, the papers characterize the wide range of variation in this area of syntax.

  • - A Comparative Study of Romance Languages
    av Raffaella (Assistant Professor of Linguistics Zanuttini
    1 181,-

    Every language has a syntactic means of distinguishing a negative from a non-negative sentence. Zanutti aims to show the range of variation in this ability by comparing the romance languages, and to reduce the differences to a constrained set of choices available to the grammar of these languages.

  •  
    1 063,-

    Adriana Belletti here collects work by top scholars presented at the University of Siena in connection with a visit by Noam Chomsky. The eight articles collected touch on broader theoretical questions related to Chomsky's Minimalist Program in particular. Contributors include Guglielmo Cinque, Richard Kayne, Luigi Rizzi, Noam Chomsky, and others.

  •  
    2 652,-

    Adriana Belletti here collects work by scholars presented at the University of Siena in connection with a visit by Noam Chomsky. The book's eight articles touch on broader theoretical questions related to Chomsky's Minimalist Program in particular. Contributors include Guglielmo Cinque, Richard Kayne, Luigi Rizzi, Noam Chomsky, and others.

  •  
    1 361,-

    By offering the first in-depth introduction to the framework of nanosyntax, Exploring Nanosyntax fills a major gap in current theoretical literature. The volume contains original contributions by senior and junior researchers in the field and will also constitute an ideal handbook for advanced students and researchers in linguistics.

  • - A Cross-Linguistic Perspective
    av Guglielmo (Professor of Linguistics Cinque
    1 298,-

    This text presents evidence locating adverb phrases in the specifiers of distinct functional projections within a theory of the clause. In this theory, both adverbs and heads, which encode the functional notions of the clause, are ordered in a rigid sequence.

  •  
    2 195,-

    This volume contains 12 chapters on the derivation of and the correlates to verb initial word order. The studies cover such widely divergent languages as Irish, Welsh, Scots Gaelic, Old Irish, and Biblical Hebrew.

  • - Scrambling and Binding in Hindi-Urdu
    av India) Kidwai, Ayesha (Assistant Professor of Linguistics, Jawaharlal University & m.fl.
    1 257 - 2 195,-

    Investigating the properties of Hindi-Urdu scrambling, this text analyses it as uniformly a focality-driven XP-adjunction operation. It proposes a theory of binding and co-reference that derives the co-reference effects in scrambled constructions.

  • - A Comparative Study of Arabic Dialects
    av University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) Benmamoun, Elabbas (Assistant Professor of Linguistics & Assistant Professor of Linguistics
    621 - 1 512,-

    Focusing on the relation between functional categories and lexical and phrasal categories in Arabic dialects, Benmamoun proposes that universally functional categories are specified for categorial features which determine their relation with lexical categories.

  • av Anders (Associate Professor of Linguistics Holmberg
    1 048,-

    The authors present a theory of the role which subject-verb agreement and case morphology play in syntax, based mainly on a detailed comparison of the syntactic and inflectional properties of the Scandinavian languages.

  •  
    1 284,-

    Aims to study the structure of the inflectional field and the left peripheral field of clauses, often described as the systems of IP (Inflection Phrase) and CP (Complementizer Phrase). This book is useful for scholars with an interest in Italian and Romance languages and also for linguists interested in contemporary research in generative grammar.

  • av Tohuku University) Ogawa, Yoshiki (Research Associate at the Graduate School of Arts and Letters & Research Associate at the Graduate School of Arts and Letters
    945 - 1 644,-

    This text argues that clauses and noun phrases are perfectly parallel. The book provides a unified theory of clauses and noun phrases, ultimately helping to simplify numerous thorny issues in the syntax/morphology interface.

  • av Steven (Assistant Professor of Linguistics Franks
    2 306,-

    This is the first linguistic study written within the Principles and Parameters framework to deal with the Slavic languages. Franks develops parametric solutions to related constructions among those languages. The book can serve both as an introduction to Government and Binding (GB) Theory for Slavic linguists as well as an introduction to Slavic languages for scholars of syntax.

  • - Essays in Comparative Syntax
     
    1 063,-

    This is a collection of (mostly) previously unpublished papers that examine function heads using the Principles and Parameters approach. The main theoretical focus is on the general theory of head movement, the properties of derived structures and their parametrization.

  • - Essays in Comparative Syntax
     
    1 789,-

    This is a collection of (mostly) previously unpublished papers that examine function heads using the Principles and Parameters approach. The main theoretical focus is on the general theory of head movement, the properties of derived structures and their parametrization.

  • - Dialect Variation and Parameter Setting
    av Jordanstown) Henry, Alison (Professor of Communications, University of Ulster & m.fl.
    1 504 - 3 021,-

    Using the Principles and Parameters framework, Henry analyses various syntactic constructions in Belfast English, and compares them with their Standard English counterparts to gain insight into both English syntax and general syntactic theory. The study will also make linguistic data on Belfast English readily available for the first time.

  • av Assistant Professor, Universite du Quebec a Montreal) Leu & Thomas (Assistant Professor
    624 - 1 750,-

    This book is a treatise of a set of function words, the closed class of determiners. The dissection of a series of different determiners in German and other Germanic languages brings to light unexpected structural regularities previously unexplored in this class of words, regularities that resemble syntactic patterns familiar from the clause.

  • av Hiroyuki (Assistant Professor of Linguistics Ura
    1 335,-

    Ura demonstrates that his theory of multiple feature-checking, an extension of Chomsky's Agr-less checking theory, gives a natural explanation for a wide range of data drawn from a variety of languages in a very consistent way with a limited set of parameters.

  • - An Essay in Comparative Semitic Syntax
    av University of Geneva) Shlonsky, Ur (Lecturer in the Department of General Linguistics & Lecturer in the Department of General Linguistics
    2 306 - 2 857,-

    Looking at the grammars of Hebrew and several varieties of Arabic, Shlonsky examines clausal architecture and verb movement and the role of agreement in natural language, using Chomsky's Government and Binding approach.

  • - From Semantics to Morphosyntax
    av University of Catania) Giorgi, Alessandra (Professor of Modern Philology, Trento) Pianesi, m.fl.
    945 - 3 309,-

    The authors bridge the gap between the semantic and syntactic properties of verb tense and aspect, suggest a unified account of tense and aspect using Chomsky's Principles and Parameters Framework and compare tense and aspect systems in Romance languages with Germanic ones. In the OXFORD STUDIES IN COMPARATIVE SYNTAX series.

  •  
    2 232,-

    A collection of previously unpublished papers on a specific topic in historical linguistics - clause structure. These papers testify to the recent renewal of interest in diachronic syntax, a consequence of the new emphasis on comparative issues in the principles and parameters framework.

  • av Gert (Post-doctoral Fellow Webelhuth
    1 335,-

    This ambitious work represents the first full-scale attempt to provide a restrictive theory of parameters, i.e. of the nature and limits of syntactic variation.

  • av McGill University) Baker, Mark C. (Associate Professor of Linguistics & Associate Professor of Linguistics
    1 328 - 3 309,-

    This study argues that polysynthetic languages - in which verbs are built up of many parts and where one verb can act as a whole sentence - are more than an accidental collection of morphological processes; rather they adopt a systematic way of representing predicate-argument relationships.

  • - Evidence from Northern Italian Dialects
    av Researcher, National Research Foundation) Poletto, Celia (Researcher & m.fl.
    931 - 3 021,-

    This work investigates the syntax of the higher portion of the functional structure of the clause using comparative data from hundreds of Northern Italian dialects. The area contains dialects that are different in most ways yet homogenous syntactically, making it ideal for this type of analysis.

  • - A Syntactic Analysis of the Romance Languages
    av Free University of Berlin) Mensching, Guido (Chair of Romance Philology & Chair of Romance Philology
    1 328 - 1 504,-

    Overt subjects are usually considered as a property of finite clauses. However, most Romance languages permit specified subjects in a broad range of infinitive constructions. Guido Mensching analyses this phenomenon in stages of French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese and other Romance varieties.

  •  
    2 894,-

    A collection of previously unpublished papers on a specific topic in historical linguistics - clause structure. These papers testify to the recent renewal of interest in diachronic syntax, a consequence of the new emphasis on comparative issues in the principles and parameters framework.

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