Acknowledgments |
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ix | |
Index of abbreviations |
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xi | |
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1 | (10) |
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1.1 Ellipsis and coordination |
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5 | (1) |
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1.2 Research questions and proposal |
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6 | (1) |
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1.3 Structure of the book |
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7 | (4) |
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Chapter 2 Types of bare argument ellipsis |
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11 | (18) |
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2.1 Stripping vs. negative contrastive constructions |
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12 | (2) |
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14 | (4) |
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18 | (2) |
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2.4 A note on conjunction reduction and BAE |
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20 | (5) |
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25 | (1) |
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26 | (3) |
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Chapter 3 State of the art |
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29 | (26) |
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3.1 Approaches to ellipsis |
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30 | (1) |
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3.2 PF-deletion approaches |
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30 | (16) |
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30 | (3) |
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33 | (8) |
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41 | (5) |
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46 | (6) |
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3.3.1 ATB-approaches to BAE |
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46 | (4) |
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3.3.2 Rightward movement approaches (Reinhart 1991) |
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50 | (2) |
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3.4 Non-elliptical approaches |
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52 | (1) |
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3.4.1 Culicover and Jackendoff (2005) |
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52 | (1) |
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53 | (2) |
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Chapter 4 Licensing stripping |
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55 | (42) |
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4.1 Concepts of information structure |
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55 | (4) |
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55 | (2) |
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57 | (1) |
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57 | (1) |
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4.1.4 Contrast and parallelism |
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58 | (1) |
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59 | (1) |
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4.2 The information structure of stripping |
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59 | (5) |
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4.2.1 Topic and focus in stripping |
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59 | (5) |
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4.3 Focus-sensitive particles and negation |
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64 | (10) |
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4.3.1 Behavior of auch in full clauses |
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64 | (3) |
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4.3.2 English too, also, as well |
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67 | (2) |
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69 | (5) |
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4.4 Deriving elliptical clauses from full clauses |
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74 | (3) |
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4.5 The syntax of stripping: Arguments for two different types |
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77 | (14) |
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4.6 The licensing mechanism |
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91 | (3) |
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94 | (3) |
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Chapter 5 Experimental evidence |
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97 | (22) |
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5.1 Previous psycholinguistic studies on BAE |
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98 | (1) |
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5.2 Experiment 1: Stripping and acceptability |
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99 | (2) |
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100 | (1) |
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100 | (1) |
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101 | (1) |
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5.2.4 Results and discussion |
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101 | (1) |
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5.3 Experiment 2: Discourse conditions |
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101 | (5) |
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103 | (1) |
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103 | (1) |
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103 | (1) |
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5.3.4 Results and discussion |
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103 | (3) |
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5.4 Experiment 3: Stripping and prosody |
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106 | (4) |
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107 | (2) |
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109 | (1) |
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109 | (1) |
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109 | (1) |
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110 | (1) |
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5.6 Experiment 4: Extracting out of stripping |
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110 | (8) |
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112 | (1) |
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113 | (1) |
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113 | (1) |
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5.6.4 Results for und-coordination |
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113 | (4) |
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5.6.5 Results for aber-coordination |
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117 | (1) |
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117 | (1) |
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118 | (1) |
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Chapter 6 Embedded stripping |
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119 | (28) |
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6.1 Introduction: Stripping and embedding |
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119 | (2) |
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6.2 New data: Embedded stripping |
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121 | (3) |
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6.3 Problems for theories of stripping |
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124 | (2) |
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6.4 Other types of reduced subordinate clauses |
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126 | (9) |
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135 | (4) |
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6.6 (Non-)embedding is a reflex of information structure |
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139 | (5) |
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6.6.1 Hypothesis: Non-embedding is a reflex of information structure and discourse relations |
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140 | (1) |
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6.6.2 Parallelism conditions for stripping |
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141 | (3) |
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144 | (3) |
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Chapter 7 Conclusion and outlook |
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147 | (6) |
References |
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153 | (10) |
Appendix |
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163 | (18) |
Index |
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181 | |