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E-grāmata: Smuggling in Syntax

Edited by (Professor of Linguistics, University of Geneva and University of Siena), Edited by (Professor of Linguistics, New York University)
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One of the fundamental properties of human language is movement, where a constituent moves from one position in a sentence to another position. Syntactic theory has long been concerned with properties of movement, including locality restrictions.

Smuggling in Syntax investigates how different movement operations interact with one another, focusing on the special case of smuggling. First introduced by volume editor Chris Collins in 2005, the term 'smuggling' refers to a specific type of movement interaction. The contributions in this volume each describe different areas where smuggling derivations play a role, including passives, causatives, adverb placement, the dative alternation, the placement of measure phrases, wh-in-situ, and word order in ergative languages. The volume also addresses issues like the freezing constraint on movement and the acquisition of smuggling derivations by children.

In this work, Adriana Belletti and Chris Collins bring together leading syntacticians to present a range of contributions on different aspects of smuggling. Tackling fundamental theoretical questions with empirical consequences, this volume explores one of the least understood types of movement and points the way toward new research.

Recenzijas

Smuggling in Syntax brings together an impressive array of diverse and enriching papers by authorities in the field who all demonstrate convincingly the impact of smuggling as a component of sentence derivation. With a range of languages represented, the papers collected here combine empirical wealth with theoretical depth. I am convinced that this volume will become a stimulating source of inspiration for many."-Liliane Haegeman, Professor Emerita, University of Ghent The volume is an impressive collection of case studies documenting the pervasive role of 'smuggling.' From its original application to passive, smuggling is convincingly shown here to play a crucial role in such diverse domains as causatives, tough-movement, dative alternations, the can't seem construction and still others. A striking step forward in our comprehension of syntactic derivations. * Guglielmo Cinque, Ca' Foscari University, Venice * An idea of growing importance to syntactic theory, smuggling has yielded an explosion of exciting research. Collected here is some of the best. * William Snyder, University of Connecticut *

List of Contributors
vii
1 Introduction
2(11)
Adriana Belletti
Chris Collins
2 Ways of smuggling in syntactic derivations
13(25)
Adriana Belletti
3 Punctual time adverbials in Italian: A smuggling analysis
38(15)
Valentino Bianchi
4 On smuggling, the freezing ban, labels, and tougfe-constructions
53(43)
Zeljko Boskovic
5 A smuggling approach to the dative alternation
96(12)
Chris Collins
6 On measure phrase alternation and smuggling
108(39)
Norbert Corver
7 Canonical and reverse predication in the syntax of the active/passive diathesis alternation
147(41)
Marcel den Dikken
8 On the syntax of the can't seem construction in English
188(34)
Hilda Koopman
9 On children's late acquisition of raising seem and control promise: Is a unified account possible?
222(33)
Victoria Mateu
Nina Hyams
10 Remnant movement and smuggling in some romance interrogative clauses
255(73)
Cecilia Poletto
Jean-Yves Pollock
11 Smuggling, ergativity, and the final-over-final condition
328(25)
Ian Roberts
Index 353
Adriana Belletti is Professor of Linguistics at the University of Siena. Her main research has focused on generative comparative morpho-syntax with special emphasis on Italian/Romance and on different modes of language acquisition within a grammar-based approach. Her publications include the co-authored volume The Acquisition of Italian (2015) and with OUP the edited volume Structures and Beyond (2004).

Chris Collins is Professor of Linguistics at New York University. He is a syntactician with an interest in African languages, including Ewe and the Khosian languages. His research focuses on anaphora, argument structure, negation, and ellipsis. He has written and edited multiple books, including most recently The Linker in the Khoisan Languages (OUP 2019).