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E-grāmata: Cross-Linguistic Studies of Imposters and Pronominal Agreement [Oxford Scholarship Online E-books]

Edited by (Professor of Linguistics, New York University)
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Imposters are third person DPs that are used to refer to the speaker/writer or addressee, such as :

(i) Your humble servant finds the time before our next encounter very long.
(ii) This reporter thinks that the current developments are extraordinary.
(iii) Daddy will be back before too long.
(iv) The present author finds the logic of the reply faulty.

This volume explores verbal and pronominal agreement with imposters from a cross-linguistic perspective. The central questions for any given language are: (a) How do singular and plural imposters agree with the verb? (b) When a pronoun has an imposter antecedent, what are the phi-features of the pronoun? The volume reveals a remarkable degree of variation in the answers to these questions, but also reveals some underlying generalizations. The contributions describe imposters in Bangla, Spanish, Albanian, Indonesian, Italian, French, Romanian, Mandarin and Icelandic.
Acknowledgments vii
Contributors ix
1 Introduction
1(27)
Chris Collins
2 (I$$)-licit Pronoun-Antecedent Relations in Bangla
28(14)
Satarupa Das
3 Spanish Imposters and Verbal Agreement
42(29)
Rachel Dudley
4 Some Observations on Imposters in Albanian
71(18)
Dalina Kallulli
5 The Syntax of Indonesian Imposters
89(32)
Daniel Kaufman
6 Imposters and Secondary Sources in Italian
121(23)
Emilio Servidio
7 Person Imposters: The View from Two Romance Languages
144(29)
Gabriela Soare
8 Mandarin Pseudo-Imposters
173(23)
Chyan-An Arthur Wang
9 Icelandic Verbal Agreement and Pronoun-Antecedent Relations
196(42)
Jim Wood
Einar Freyr Sigurdsson
10 Indefinite Imposters
238(21)
Violeta Vazquez Rojas
Language Index 259(2)
Author Index 261(3)
Subject Index 264
Chris Collins is a professor in the Department of Linguistics at New York University. He received his Ph.D. in linguistics from MIT in 1993. He specializes syntactic theory, including the syntax of English and the syntax of African languages.