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This book presents the latest research in the Nanosyntax framework, a late-insertion theory based on the idea that the elementary building blocks of syntactic trees are limited to single features. The chapters contribute to a better understanding of the framework as a whole and specifically of the lexicalization algorithm.
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This book presents the latest research in the Nanosyntax framework, a late-insertion theory based on the idea that the elementary building blocks of syntactic trees are limited to single features. The chapters contribute to a better understanding of the framework as a whole and specifically of the lexicalization algorithm.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 528
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. Dezember 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 243mm x 167mm x 37mm
- Gewicht: 925g
- ISBN-13: 9780198947134
- ISBN-10: 0198947135
- Artikelnr.: 73601945
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 528
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. Dezember 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 243mm x 167mm x 37mm
- Gewicht: 925g
- ISBN-13: 9780198947134
- ISBN-10: 0198947135
- Artikelnr.: 73601945
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Pavel Caha is an associate professor at Masaryk University. His research focuses on the theoretical implications of case marking, declensions, and degree morphology. His work has been published in journals such as Natural Language & Linguistic Theory, Morphology, Journal of Linguistics, and Glossa, and in reference works including The Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Linguistics, The Wiley-Blackwell Companion to Morphology, and The Cambridge Handbook of Distributed Morphology. Karen De Clercq is a CNRS researcher affiliated with the Laboratoire de Linguistique Formelle at UniversitÃ(c) Paris CitÃ(c). Her main research interest is the morphosyntax of negation, which she approaches from a typological and nanosyntactic perspective. She is the author of The Morphosyntax of Negative Markers (Mouton de Gruyter, 2020), and co-editor of Exploring Nanosyntax (OUP, 2018) and Adverbial Resumption in Verb Second Languages (OUP, 2023). Guido Vanden Wyngaerd is a full-time professor at KU Leuven for the fields of Dutch and General Linguistics. His current research focuses on negation and adjectival degrees from a nanosyntactic perspective. His publications include Dissolving Binding Theory (with Johan Rooryck; OUP, 2011), as well as a number of articles in leading international journals and reference works. He is an Associate Editor of Glossa.
* 1: Karen De Clercq;Pavel Caha;Michal Starke;Guido Vanden Wyngaerd:
Nanosyntax: State of the art and recent developments
* Part I The Functional Sequence
* 2: Anastasiia Vyshnevska: Comparing Slavic comparatives
* 3: Fenna Bergsma;Jan Don;Anne Merkuur;Meg Smith: Complex Left
Branches in Frisian verbs
* 4: Furkan Dikmen; Ömer Demirok: Decomposing habituals
* 5: Antonio Fábregas: Suppletion and affix selection in Nanosyntax:
The case of Spanish numerals
* Part II Prefixes
* 6: Bartosz Wiland: Polish prefix stacking redux
* 7: Anne-Li Demonie: Complications of Complex Left Branches: The case
of Dutch verbal prefixes
* 8: Serra Gök;Ömer Demirok: The non-uniform nature of auxiliaries: A
case study on Turkish
* PART III The Algorithm and Subextraction
* 9: Pavel Caha: A local analysis of an apparent nonlocal allomorphy in
Tamil: A perspective from Rutul
* 10: Daniar Kasenov: ABA patterns and the generative power of
Nanosyntax
* 11: Pavel Caha;Lucie Taraldsen Medová: Syncretism and markedness
paradoxes in the Russian demonstrative declension
* 12: Tarald Taraldsen: The relation between theme vowels and root
suppletion
* Part IV New Explorations
* 13: Tommaso Balsemin;Francesco Pinzin: A modular approach to
Phonologically Conditioned Allomorphy: The case of the Ligurian
article system
* 14: Utku Türk: Controlling morphosyntactic competition through
phonology
* 15: Lena Baunaz;Eric Lander: Lexical structure and subjunctive
selection
* 16: David Natvig;Michael T. Putnam;Emmeline Wilson: Exponency in
bilingual grammars: Conflict and compromise
Nanosyntax: State of the art and recent developments
* Part I The Functional Sequence
* 2: Anastasiia Vyshnevska: Comparing Slavic comparatives
* 3: Fenna Bergsma;Jan Don;Anne Merkuur;Meg Smith: Complex Left
Branches in Frisian verbs
* 4: Furkan Dikmen; Ömer Demirok: Decomposing habituals
* 5: Antonio Fábregas: Suppletion and affix selection in Nanosyntax:
The case of Spanish numerals
* Part II Prefixes
* 6: Bartosz Wiland: Polish prefix stacking redux
* 7: Anne-Li Demonie: Complications of Complex Left Branches: The case
of Dutch verbal prefixes
* 8: Serra Gök;Ömer Demirok: The non-uniform nature of auxiliaries: A
case study on Turkish
* PART III The Algorithm and Subextraction
* 9: Pavel Caha: A local analysis of an apparent nonlocal allomorphy in
Tamil: A perspective from Rutul
* 10: Daniar Kasenov: ABA patterns and the generative power of
Nanosyntax
* 11: Pavel Caha;Lucie Taraldsen Medová: Syncretism and markedness
paradoxes in the Russian demonstrative declension
* 12: Tarald Taraldsen: The relation between theme vowels and root
suppletion
* Part IV New Explorations
* 13: Tommaso Balsemin;Francesco Pinzin: A modular approach to
Phonologically Conditioned Allomorphy: The case of the Ligurian
article system
* 14: Utku Türk: Controlling morphosyntactic competition through
phonology
* 15: Lena Baunaz;Eric Lander: Lexical structure and subjunctive
selection
* 16: David Natvig;Michael T. Putnam;Emmeline Wilson: Exponency in
bilingual grammars: Conflict and compromise
* 1: Karen De Clercq;Pavel Caha;Michal Starke;Guido Vanden Wyngaerd:
Nanosyntax: State of the art and recent developments
* Part I The Functional Sequence
* 2: Anastasiia Vyshnevska: Comparing Slavic comparatives
* 3: Fenna Bergsma;Jan Don;Anne Merkuur;Meg Smith: Complex Left
Branches in Frisian verbs
* 4: Furkan Dikmen; Ömer Demirok: Decomposing habituals
* 5: Antonio Fábregas: Suppletion and affix selection in Nanosyntax:
The case of Spanish numerals
* Part II Prefixes
* 6: Bartosz Wiland: Polish prefix stacking redux
* 7: Anne-Li Demonie: Complications of Complex Left Branches: The case
of Dutch verbal prefixes
* 8: Serra Gök;Ömer Demirok: The non-uniform nature of auxiliaries: A
case study on Turkish
* PART III The Algorithm and Subextraction
* 9: Pavel Caha: A local analysis of an apparent nonlocal allomorphy in
Tamil: A perspective from Rutul
* 10: Daniar Kasenov: ABA patterns and the generative power of
Nanosyntax
* 11: Pavel Caha;Lucie Taraldsen Medová: Syncretism and markedness
paradoxes in the Russian demonstrative declension
* 12: Tarald Taraldsen: The relation between theme vowels and root
suppletion
* Part IV New Explorations
* 13: Tommaso Balsemin;Francesco Pinzin: A modular approach to
Phonologically Conditioned Allomorphy: The case of the Ligurian
article system
* 14: Utku Türk: Controlling morphosyntactic competition through
phonology
* 15: Lena Baunaz;Eric Lander: Lexical structure and subjunctive
selection
* 16: David Natvig;Michael T. Putnam;Emmeline Wilson: Exponency in
bilingual grammars: Conflict and compromise
Nanosyntax: State of the art and recent developments
* Part I The Functional Sequence
* 2: Anastasiia Vyshnevska: Comparing Slavic comparatives
* 3: Fenna Bergsma;Jan Don;Anne Merkuur;Meg Smith: Complex Left
Branches in Frisian verbs
* 4: Furkan Dikmen; Ömer Demirok: Decomposing habituals
* 5: Antonio Fábregas: Suppletion and affix selection in Nanosyntax:
The case of Spanish numerals
* Part II Prefixes
* 6: Bartosz Wiland: Polish prefix stacking redux
* 7: Anne-Li Demonie: Complications of Complex Left Branches: The case
of Dutch verbal prefixes
* 8: Serra Gök;Ömer Demirok: The non-uniform nature of auxiliaries: A
case study on Turkish
* PART III The Algorithm and Subextraction
* 9: Pavel Caha: A local analysis of an apparent nonlocal allomorphy in
Tamil: A perspective from Rutul
* 10: Daniar Kasenov: ABA patterns and the generative power of
Nanosyntax
* 11: Pavel Caha;Lucie Taraldsen Medová: Syncretism and markedness
paradoxes in the Russian demonstrative declension
* 12: Tarald Taraldsen: The relation between theme vowels and root
suppletion
* Part IV New Explorations
* 13: Tommaso Balsemin;Francesco Pinzin: A modular approach to
Phonologically Conditioned Allomorphy: The case of the Ligurian
article system
* 14: Utku Türk: Controlling morphosyntactic competition through
phonology
* 15: Lena Baunaz;Eric Lander: Lexical structure and subjunctive
selection
* 16: David Natvig;Michael T. Putnam;Emmeline Wilson: Exponency in
bilingual grammars: Conflict and compromise







