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E-grāmata: Derived Coordination: A Minimalist Perspective on Clause Chains, Converbs and Asymmetric Coordination

  • Formāts: 249 pages
  • Sērija : Linguistische Arbeiten
  • Izdošanas datums: 14-Sep-2015
  • Izdevniecība: De Gruyter
  • ISBN-13: 9783110443578
  • Formāts - PDF+DRM
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  • Formāts: 249 pages
  • Sērija : Linguistische Arbeiten
  • Izdošanas datums: 14-Sep-2015
  • Izdevniecība: De Gruyter
  • ISBN-13: 9783110443578

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Weisser explores the different types of clausal relations in the world's language now that some linguists are questioning the long held belief that such relations must be either subordinate or coordinate. He focuses on constructions that do not seem to be fully either one or the other, examining them in detail, reviewing the evidence for the relations, and discussing whether the assumption of the strict subordination-coordination dichotomy can be maintained. His topics include properties of medial constructions, scene-setting coordination, and the coordinate structure constraint as a derivational principle. Annotation ©2015 Ringgold, Inc., Portland, OR (protoview.com)

This book discusses a number of phenomena claimed to be in between coordination and subordination all of which have been notoriously problematic for various syntactic theories in the past years. Based on a comprehensive empirical analysis, this book provides a unified syntactic analysis for all of these phenomena and shows how the mixed properties can be derived in a Minimalist Framework.

Abbreviations ix
Abstract xi
Part I Clause Chains, Medials, and Converbs
1 Introducing Clause Chains
3(4)
2 Properties of Medial Constructions
7(12)
2.1 The Morphological Form of Medial Clauses
7(1)
2.2 The Syntactic Properties of Medial Clauses
8(7)
2.3 Summary
15(4)
3 Previous Analyses
19(12)
3.1 Subordination Approaches
19(4)
3.2 Coordination Approaches
23(8)
4 A Derived Coordination Approach to Medial Clauses
31(24)
4.1 Theoretical Background
31(5)
4.1.1 The Dichotomy of Coordination and Subordination
31(3)
4.1.2 The Derived Coordination Account
34(2)
4.2 A Derived Coordination Account of Medial Constructions
36(5)
4.2.1 The Category of Medial Clauses
36(3)
4.2.2 Applying the Theory
39(2)
4.3 Deriving the Properties of Medial Constructions
41(12)
4.3.1 Morphological Dependence
41(2)
4.3.2 Extraposition and Center Embedding
43(2)
4.3.3 Backward Pronominalization
45(1)
4.3.4 Extraction
46(7)
4.4 Summary
53(2)
5 Multiple Medial Clauses
55(14)
6 Medials Remaining in Situ: Converbs
69(12)
6.1 General Properties of Converb Clauses
69(3)
6.2 Applying Clausal Relation Tests
72(5)
6.3 Deriving the Syntactic Properties of Converb Clauses
77(4)
7 Two Case Studies: Tsakhur and Korean
81(14)
7.1 Two Types of Converbs in Tsakhur
81(5)
7.2 Converbs and Chaining in Korean
86(9)
8 Crosslinguistic Variation of Clause Chaining Constructions
95(14)
8.1 Parametrizing the Derived Coordination Approach
95(2)
8.2 Variation of Scopal Properties
97(5)
8.3 Extraction
102(2)
8.4 More Parameters
104(3)
8.5 Summary
107(2)
9 A New Perspective on Switch-Reference
109(6)
10 Summary of Part I
115(6)
Part II Asymmetric Coordination
1 Introducing Asymmetric Coordination
121(6)
2 Scene-Setting Coordination
127(28)
2.1 The properties of Scene-Setting Coordination
127(6)
2.2 Previous Analyses of SceCo
133(7)
2.2.1 A subordination analysis: Wiklund (1996, 2007)
134(2)
2.2.2 A coordination analysis: De Vos (2009)
136(4)
2.3 A Derived Coordination Account of Scene-Setting Coordination
140(8)
2.3.1 The Category of SceCo conjuncts
140(1)
2.3.2 The Analysis of SceCo constructions
141(7)
2.4 SceCo with Multiple Conjuncts
148(7)
3 Consecutive Coordination
155(8)
3.1 Integrating ConsecCo Constructions into the Theory of SceCo
155(3)
3.2 Mixed Cases of SceCo and ConsecCo
158(5)
4 Conditional Coordination
163(26)
4.1 Some Syntactic Properties of CondCo
163(3)
4.2 Previous Analyses
166(6)
4.2.1 Culicover & Jackendoff (1997)
166(4)
4.2.2 Keshet (2013)
170(2)
4.3 A Derived Coordination Account to CondCo
172(14)
4.3.1 The Analysis of CondCo
176(2)
4.3.2 Deriving the Properties of CondCo
178(8)
4.4 Combining Different Cases of Asymmetric Coordination
186(1)
4.5 Summary
187(2)
5 Summary of Part II
189(4)
Part III Theoretical Discussion and Open Issues
1 Movement to Spec&P and its trigger
193(4)
2 The Coordinate Structure Constraint as a Derivational Principle
197(4)
3 The Merge over Move-Principle
201(2)
4 Transparent Adjuncts, Opaque Adjuncts
203(6)
5 Constraining the Mechanism: Avoiding Overgeneration
209(4)
6 Syntactic Evidence for Asymmetric Coordination Phrases
213(4)
Conclusion 217(4)
Bibliography 221(10)
Index 231
Philipp Weisser, Leipzig University, Germany.