Cover image for Microvariation in Syntactic Doubling : Views from Global Though Leaders III.
Microvariation in Syntactic Doubling : Views from Global Though Leaders III.
Title:
Microvariation in Syntactic Doubling : Views from Global Though Leaders III.
Author:
Barbiers, Sjef.
ISBN:
9781848550216
Personal Author:
Edition:
1st ed.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (495 pages)
Series:
Syntax and Semantics ; v.36

Syntax and Semantics
Contents:
Syntax and Semantics -- Editorial Board -- Copyright page -- Contents -- List of Contributors -- Microvariation in Syntactic Doubling - An Introduction -- 1. SYNTACTIC DOUBLING1 -- 2. SYNTACTIC MICROVARIATION -- 3. TYPES OF SYNTACTIC DOUBLING -- 3.1. Doubling in the Nominal Domain -- 3.2. Doubling in the Adjectival Domain -- 3.3. Doubling in the Prepositional Domain -- 3.4. Pronoun Doubling -- 3.5. Doubling in the Extended Verbal Domain -- 4. TYPES OF SYNTACTIC ANALYSES -- 4.1. Introduction -- 4.2. Doubling as Multiple Spell-Out of Chain Positions -- 4.3. Doubling as Big Constituent Splitting -- 4.4. Doubling as Agreement -- 5. DOUBLING QUESTIONS - A SUMMARY -- REFERENCES -- Part I: Doubling in the Quantificational Domain -- Chapter 1. Doubling as Splitting -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. DP DOUBLING AND FEATURE STRIPPING -- 3. WH-DOUBLING: THE FUNCTIONAL STRUCTURE OF OPERATORS -- 4. NEGATIVE CONCORD -- 5. CONCLUSION -- ACKNOWLEDGMENT -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 2. Doubling of Clitics and Doubling by Clitics: The Case of Negation -- 1. DOUBLING OF n ON EITHER SIDE OF A SUBJECT CLITIC -- 1.1. Background: The Adverbial Negation -- 1.2. Analysis -- 2. DOUBLING OF n ON EITHER SIDE OF AN OBJECT CLITIC -- 2.1. Trebling and More -- 3. NON-NEGATIVE n -- 4. NEGATIVE CONCORD -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 3. Doubling vs. Omission: Insights from Afrikaans Negation -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. THE AFRIKAANS NEGATION FACTS -- 3. THE ANALYSIS -- 3.1. Background -- 3.2. Distinguishing the Two Negators -- 3.3. Nie1 is a Neg-Head and Nie2 is a (CP-related) Polarity-Head -- 3.4. Accounting for the Alternation of Doublingand Omission Structures -- 4. CONCLUSION -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 4. Tyrolean A-Bar Movement: Doubling and Resumptive Pronoun Structures -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. DATA -- 2.1. Long Extraction of Relative Pronouns.

2.2. Long Extraction of Interrogative Pronouns -- 2.3. Properties of Doubling and ResumptivePronoun Structures -- 3. PREVIOUS ANALYSES OF DOUBLING STRUCTURES -- 4. ANALYSIS -- 5. CONCLUSIONS -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 5. Tense/Mood/Aspect-Doubling -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. THE LINKING ELEMENT -- 3. INFINITIVAL IN DISGUISE -- 4. LIMITS OF VARIATION -- 4.1. Locality -- 4.2. Tenselessness -- 4.3. The More Structure - The More Doubling -- 5. A SURFACE REFLEX OF RESTRUCTURING -- 6. CONCLUSION -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 6. "Double" Floating Quantifiers in Modern Greek and Pontic -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. DP-ASSOCIATES OF CLITICS -- 2.1. Clitic Doubling Versus Clitic Right Dislocation -- 2.2. Cases of Obligatory Clitic Doubling -- 3. OBLIGATORY CLITIC DOUBLING WITH FLOATING QUANTIFIERS? -- 4. DO FLOATING QUANTIFIERS NEED TO BE ACCOMPANIEDBY A CLITIC IN ALL CLITIC LANGUAGES? -- 5. ON THE NATURE OF THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THEFLOATING QUANTIFIER AND THE DP -- 6. IMPLICATIONS FOR THEORIES OF FLOATING QUANTIFIERS -- 6.1. Returning to Focused All -- 6.2. FQs and A/A'-Movement -- 7. CONCLUSIONS -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- REFERENCES -- Part II: Subject Doubling -- Chapter 7. Pronominal Doubling in Dutch Dialects: Big DPs and Coordinations -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. PREVIOUS ACCOUNTS OF CLITIC DOUBLING -- 3. A CLASSIFICATION OF THE PRONOMINAL SYSTEMIN WAMBEEK DUTCH -- 3.1. Déchaine and Wiltschko (2002) -- 3.2. The Pronominal System of Wambeek Dutch -- 3.3. The Categorial Status of Subject Pronounsin Wambeek Dutch -- 3.4. The Categorial Status of Object Pronounsin Wambeek Dutch -- 3.5. SUMMARY -- 4. PUTTING TWO AND TWO TOGETHER: THE BIG DP -- 4.1. Introduction -- 4.2. The Basic Structure -- 4.3. Predictions Made by the Proposal -- 5. THE SYNTAX OF CLITIC DOUBLING -- 6. FIRST CONJUNCT CLITIC DOUBLING -- 7. FULL COORDINATION CLITIC DOUBLING.

8. CONCLUSION -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- REFERENCES -- APPENDIX: THE CATEGORIAL STATUS OF PRONOUNS IN WAMBEEK DUTCH -- Chapter 8. On Geographical Adequacy, or: How Many Types of Subject Doubling in Dutch -- 1. SUBJECT DOUBLING: DIFFERENT PATTERNS -- 2. DIALECT GEOGRAPHY -- 2.1. Geographical Adequacy -- 2.2. Main Types of Subject Doubling -- 2.3. Problematic Types -- 2.4. Implications for Previous Analyses -- 3. THE DIACHRONY OF SUBJECT DOUBLING -- 3.1. Geography and Diachrony -- 3.2. The Rise of Clitic Doubling -- 3.3. From Clitic Doubling to Topic Doubling -- 3.4. From Clitic Doubling to Topic Marking -- 4. CONCLUSIONS -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- REFERENCES -- APPENDIX: RESULTS OF THE TOPIC MARKING INVESTIGATION -- Chapter 9. Pleonastic Tet in West Flemishand the Cartography of subject Positions -- 1. INTRODUCTION: AIM AND SCOPE -- 1.1. Tet as a Doubling Pronoun? -- 1.2. Organization of the Chapter -- 2. SUBJECT DOUBLING AND THE PRO-DROP PHENOMENON -- 2.1. Subject Doubling and Strong Subject Pronounsin the Pro-Drop Languages -- 2.2. Third Person Neuter and Pronoun Doubling -- 3. THE DISTRIBUTION OF TET IN THE LAPSCHEURE DIALECT -- 3.1. The Distribution of Tet is unlike that of Strong Pronouns -- 3.2. The Distribution of Tet is unlike that of Weak Pronouns -- 4. A POSITION FOR TET -- 4.1. Interpretation -- 4.2. A Functional Projection Between CP and IP -- 5. SPECULATIONS ON TET AND COMPLEMENTIZER AGREEMENT -- 5.1. The Data -- 5.2. Tet does not Intervene in Complementizer Agreement -- 6. THE ALTERNATION TET/IE -- 7. CONCLUSIONS -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 10. Beyond Doubling: Overt Expletivesin European Portuguese Dialects -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. EXPLETIVE CONSTRUCTIONS ARE NOT MSCS IN EP DIALECTS: EVIDENCE FROM THE SYNTACTIC DISTRIBUTION OF EXPLETIVE ELE -- 2.1. Preliminaries -- 2.2. Some Differences with MSCs.

2.3. The Peripheral Position of Expletive Ele -- 3. EXPLETIVE ELE AND DISCOURSE -- 3.1. General Connections -- 3.2. Particular Effects -- 4. EXPLETIVE ELE AND ForceP -- 5. CONCLUSION -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 11. Subject Doubling in Finnish: The Role of Deficient Pronouns -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. PROPERTIES OF THE DOUBLING PRONOUN -- 3. PROPERTIES OF THE DOUBLED SUBJECT -- 4. STRUCTURAL PROPERTIES -- 5. SUBJECT TREBLING -- 6. THE SYNTAX OF DOUBLING -- 7. CONCLUSIONS: DEGREES OF DEFICIENCY -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- REFERENCES -- Part III: Doubling in Other Domains -- Chapter 12. Patterns of Doubling in Alemannic -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. DOUBLING OF INFLECTIONAL MORPHEMES -- 2.1. S-Doubling -- 2.2. Doubled Past Participle -- 3. SYNTACTIC DOUBLING -- 3.1. Tun-Insertion -- 3.2. Doubling in Prepositional Phrases -- 3.3. Doubly Filled Comp -- 4. DOUBLING VIA INTERFACE -- 4.1. Relative Pronouns -- 4.2. Doubling of the Infi nitival Marker -- 5. CONCLUSION -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 13. The Possessor that Appears Twice.Variation, Structure and Function of Possessive Doubling in German -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. DPIPPC: THE DATA -- 3. DPIPC: THE STRUCTURE -- 4. THE FUNCTION OF DOUBLE MARKING -- 5. SOME PRELIMINARY CONCLUSIONS -- ACKNOWLEDGMENT -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 14. Preposition Reduplicationin Icelandic -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. THE BASIC FACTS -- 3. P-REDUPLICATION AND THE COPY THEORY OF MOVEMENT -- 3.1. Nunes (2001, 2004) -- 3.2. Analyzing P-reduplication -- 4. P-REDUPLICATION WITH PREPOSITION MOVEMENT INOLD ICELANDIC -- 5. CONCLUSION -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 15. On Peripheral Doublingin Scandinavian -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. RIGHT PERIPHERAL DOUBLING (RPD) -- 2.1. The Nature of the Proform -- 2.2. Stressed Right Peripheral Pronouns and Notes on Prosody -- 2.3. Clause Types and Illocutionary Force.

2.4. Dialect Geography -- 3. RIGHT PERIPHERAL DOUBLING VERSUS DISLOCATION -- 3.1. Distinguishing Peripheral Doubling from Dislocation -- 3.2. Intermediate Summary -- 3.3. Further Notes on Stressed Right Peripheral Pronouns (SRPP) -- 3.4. Left Dislocation Replicates the Right Periphery -- 4. RIGHT IS LEFT AND LEFT IS TOO -- 4.1. Getting the Orders Right -- 4.2. Post-Particle Pronouns and Pre-Particle DPs -- 4.3. Getting at Prosody -- 5. CONCLUSION -- ACKNOWLEDGMENT -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 16. Variation in Clitic-Doublingin South Slavic -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. FORMS OF THE SOUTH SLAVIC PRONOMINAL CLITICS -- 3. MACEDONIAN -- 3.1. Clitic-Doubling of Lexical Direct Objects -- 3.2. Clitic-Doubling of Lexical Indirect Objects -- 3.3. Clitic-Doubling of Personal Pronouns -- 3.4. Clitic-Doubling of 'wh'-Words -- 4. BULGARIAN -- 4.1. Clitic-Doubling of Lexical Objects -- 4.2. Clitic-Doubling of Personal Pronouns -- 4.3. Clitic-Doubling of 'wh'-Words -- 5. STANDARD SERBIAN/CROATIAN/BOSNIAN/(MONTENEGRIN) -- 6. THE SOUTH-EASTERN SERBIAN DIALECTS -- 6.1. Clitic-Doubling of Lexical Objects -- 6.2. Clitic-Doubling of Pronouns -- 7. CONCLUSIONS -- REFERENCES -- Subject Index.
Abstract:
Contains seventeen papers on microvariation in syntactic doubling. This work provides an overview of the syntactic doubling phenomena attested and of the theoretical analyses available. It discusses the syntactic doubling phenomena including, among others, subject pronoun doubling, WH pronoun doubling, clitic doubling and auxiliary doubling.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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