Natural language differs from artificial ones in having the ‘displacement property,’ allowing expressions to ‘move’ from one position to another in the sentence. The mapping from syntax to phonology, therefore, must include rules specifying how objects created by movement are pronounced, or in technical jargon, how chains are linearized. One of these rules is Copy Deletion. The present study investigates the structural description of Copy Deletion. Specifically, it proposes a phrase geometric constraint on its application. The proposal is corroborated by empirical arguments based on distributional and interpretational facts concerning predicate clefts, NP-Splits, and head ordering patterns. The data are drawn from languages of different types and families including Chinese, English, Dutch, German, Hebrew, Norwegian, Swedish, and Vietnamese. The book, thus, contributes to our understanding of a crucial property of natural language and should be of relevance to readers who are interested in the cross-linguistic approach to Universal Grammar research. Product details Publisher: De Gruyter; 1 edition (April 15, 2019) Publication Date: April 15, 2019
The Edginess of Silence: A Study on Chain Linearization (Studia grammatica Book 84)
$27.62
Be the first to review “The Edginess of Silence: A Study on Chain Linearization (Studia grammatica Book 84)” Cancel reply
Related products
Ebook New zetlly
Russia, NATO and Cooperative Security: Bridging the Gap (Contemporary Security Studies)
$22.99
Ebook New zetlly
The Oxford Handbook of the History of Communism (Oxford Handbooks)
$38.99
Ebook New zetlly
Industrial Process Automation Systems: Design and Implementation ?
$15.99
$22.99
Ebook New zetlly
$15.99
$16.99
Ebook New zetlly
The Changing Room: Sex, Drag and Theatre (Gender in Performance)
$22.99
Ebook New zetlly
$18.99


Reviews
There are no reviews yet.