Principles and parameters in comparative grammar
著者
書誌事項
Principles and parameters in comparative grammar
(Current studies in linguistics series, 20)
MIT Press, c1991
大学図書館所蔵 全129件
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注記
Papers from the First Princeton Workshop on Comparative Grammar held in Mar. 1986
Includes bibliographies and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
These essays by an outstanding group of linguists present case studies in contemporary comparative grammar, illustrating the rich and varied ways in which the principles and parameters framework of generative grammar can provide explanations for both the underlying universal properties of the world's languages and the ways in which they differ. The final essay by Noam Chomsky offers a new perspective on the principles and parameters approach to comparative grammar. In his introduction, Freidin describes the historical background of current work in comparative grammar and compares this work to the comparative studies of the nineteenth century. He notes how the current approach traces the fundamental unity of all languages to the language faculty, in contrast to that of the nineteenth century which was primarily concerned with the ancestral relations among languages. The essays that follow convey the wide scope of the interaction between current theory and crosslinguistic studies. Topics include the relevance of binding theory for crosslinguistic studies; the interaction between the syntax/lexical semantics interface and the theory of UG; the role of phrase structure and levels of representation in accounting or syntactic variation; crosslinguistic variation in word order phenomena; and the ways in which the study of comparative grammar can itself contribute to the understanding of UG.
Contributors
Joseph Aoun. Adriana Belletti. Noam Chomsky. Robert Freidin. Wayne Harbert. Norbert Hornstein. C.-T. James Huang. Anthony S. Kroch. Howard Lasnik. Yen-hui Audrey Li. David Lightfoot. Luigi Rizzi. Ken Safir. Beatrice Santorini. Rex A. Sprouse. Timothy Stowell. Tarald Taraldsen. Lisa deMena Travis. Edwin Williams
目次
- On the necessity of binding conditions, Howard Lasnik
- binding, SUBJECT and accessibility, Wayne Harbert
- remarks on the status of the null object, C.-T. James Huang
- the argument-bound empty categories, Edwin Williams
- evaluative predicates and the representation of implicit arguments, Ken Safir
- notes on psych-verbs, theta-theory and binding, Adriana Belletti and Luigi Rizzi
- the interaction of operators, Joseph Aoun and Yen-hui Audrey Li
- small clause restructuring, Tim Stowell
- a directionality parameter for subject-object linking, Knut Tarald Taraldsen
- the derived constituent structure of the west Germanic verb-raising construction, Anthony S. Kroch and Beatrice Santorini
- paramenters of phrase structure and verb-second phenomena, Lisa deMena Travis
- on the nature of lexical government
- Norbert Hornstein and David Lightfoot
- lexical case phenomena, Robert Freidin and Rex A. Sprouse
- some notes on economy of derivation and representation, Noam Chomsky.
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