On the nature of the syntax-phonology interface : cliticization and related phenomena

Bibliographic Information

On the nature of the syntax-phonology interface : cliticization and related phenomena

Željko Bošković

(North-Holland linguistic series, Linguistic variations ; v. 60)

Elsevier, 2001

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The theoretical domain of investigation of this volume is the nature of the syntax-phonology interface. The empirical domain of investigation is cliticization in South Slavic. The volume also examines several phenomena that raise theoretical issues related to those involved in South Slavic cliticization, namely, multiple wh-fronting in Slavic and Romanian, Germanic V-2, object shift and stylistic fronting in Scandinavian, and negation in Romance. The central theoretical questions considered in the volume are how syntax and phonology interact with each other and whether PF can affect word order. It is argued that PF does affect word order, but not through actual PF movement. The volume makes new proposals concerning the structural representation of clitics and the nature of clitic clustering. It also provides an account of the second position effect and teases apart the role of syntax and phonology in cliticization and the second position phenomenon.

Table of Contents

Preface Introduction Theoretical and empirical scope of this volume Outline Serbo-Croatian Second Position Cliticization: Syntax and/or Phonology? Approaches to second position cliticization in Serbo-Croatian Syntactic accounts of second position cliticization Phonological approaches to second position cliticization Concluding remarks More on Second Position Clitics: Pronunciation of Non-Trivial Chains Pronunciation of non-trivial chains and the copy theory of movement A phonology/syntax mixmatch: Serbo-Croatian je Other consequences of the pronounce-a-copy analysis for Serbo-Croatian clitics Slovenian clitics Polish clitics The V-2 effect in Germanic Bulgarian and Macedonian Clitics Pronominal clitics Auxiliary clitics Li Concluding remarks Appendix A Appendix B Conclusion References Index

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