This book offers a critical review of the foundations, logic, and methodologies of contemporary derivational syntactic theory. It explores the theoretical and empirical consequences of derivational approaches to syntax, and offers explicit alternatives in the form of a leaner theory of linguistic representations.
This book offers a critical review of the foundations, logic, and methodologies of contemporary derivational syntactic theory. It explores the theoretical and empirical consequences of derivational approaches to syntax, and offers explicit alternatives in the form of a leaner theory of linguistic representations.
Peter W. Culicover is Distinguished University Professor Emeritus at the Ohio State University, where he was founding Director of the Center for Cognitive Science (1989-2003) and Chair of the Department of Linguistics (1998-2006). His research is concerned primarily with understanding and explaining the syntactic structure of human languages, and he has explored such topics as language learnability, computational modeling of language acquisition and language change, the grammar of focus, grammatical constructions, the grammar of contemporary English, and the architecture of grammar. His many publications with OUP include Grammar and Complexity (2013), Explaining Syntax (2013), and Language Change, Variation, and Universals (2021). Giuseppe Varaschin is a researcher and lecturer in the Department of German Studies and Linguistics at Humboldt-Universitÿt zu Berlin, where he is currently part of the research project "Building register into the architecture of language - an HPSG account". He specializes in syntactic theory and the syntax-semantics interface. His current work explores topics such as syntactic variation, social meaning, sociolinguistic perception, anaphora, agreement, and the architecture of grammar, with a focus on English, German, and Romance languages. He is also interested in developing computer-processable grammar fragments as a way of checking the formal consistency and large-scale empirical adequacy of theoretical proposals.
Inhaltsangabe
Preface Acknowledgments 1: Overview Part I Order and Structure 2: Licensing order 3: Cryptoconstructionalism Part II Problems 4: Problems of movement 5: Problems of invisibility Part III Justifying Syntactic Structure 6: The case for flat structure 7: The explanatory role of syntactic structure Part IV Syntactocentrism 8: Syntactocentrism: Semantics 9: Syntactocentrism: Morphology Part V Minimalism 10: Whose minimalism? References Index
Preface Acknowledgments 1: Overview Part I Order and Structure 2: Licensing order 3: Cryptoconstructionalism Part II Problems 4: Problems of movement 5: Problems of invisibility Part III Justifying Syntactic Structure 6: The case for flat structure 7: The explanatory role of syntactic structure Part IV Syntactocentrism 8: Syntactocentrism: Semantics 9: Syntactocentrism: Morphology Part V Minimalism 10: Whose minimalism? References Index
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