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Regimes of Derivation in Syntax and Morphology

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Gebonden, 190 blz. | Engels
Taylor & Francis | 1e druk, 2011
ISBN13: 9780415887236
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Taylor & Francis 1e druk, 2011 9780415887236
Onderdeel van serie Routledge Leading Linguists
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Regimes of Derivation in Syntax and Morphology presents a theory of the architecture of the human linguistic system that differs from all current theories on four key points. First, the theory rests on a modular separation of word syntax from phrasal syntax, where word syntax corresponds roughly to what has been called derivational morphology. Second, morphosyntax (corresponding to what is traditionally called "inflectional morphology") is the immediate spellout of the syntactic merge operation, and so there is no separate morphosyntactic component. There is no LF (logical form) derived; that is, there is no structure which 'mirrors' semantic interpretation ("LF"); instead, semantics interprets the derivation itself. And fourth, syntactic islands are derived purely as a consequence of the formal mechanics of syntactic derivation, and so there are no bounding nodes, no phases, no subjacency, and in fact no absolute islands. Lacking a morphosyntactic component and an LF representation are positive benefits as these provide temptations for theoretical mischief. The theory is a descendant of the author's "Representation Theory" and so inherits its other benefits as well, including explanations for properties of reconstruction, remnant movement, improper movement, and scrambling/scope interactions, and the different embedding regimes for clauses and DPs. Syntactic islands are added to this list as special cases of improper movement.

Specificaties

ISBN13:9780415887236
Taal:Engels
Bindwijze:Gebonden
Aantal pagina's:190
Druk:1

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€ 202,60
Levertijd ongeveer 11 werkdagen
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        Regimes of Derivation in Syntax and Morphology