منابع مشابه
Clitics and Clause Structure
In late Medieval Greek and many modern dialects, pronominal clitics are syntactically adjoined to an IP projection. In another set of dialects they have become syntactically adjoined to a verbal head. In the most innovating dialects (which include Standard Greek) they are agreement affixes. Extending the Fontana/Halpern clitic typology, we propose a trajectory of lexicalization from X clitics v...
متن کاملFrench Predicate Clitics and Clause Structure*
Although in general we have a reasonably good idea of constituency, we do not have as good an idea of the internal organization of constituents. A substantial amount of recent research has led to the conclusion that in many cases, a much more elaborate internal structure than previously assumed is necessary. Consider for example the internal structure of the NP the destruction of the boat. It w...
متن کاملSentential Specifiers in the Korean Clause Structure
The Korean double nominative construction exhibits various properties distinguished not only from ordinary subject-object clauses but also from nominative complement constructions. Particularly, the second NP, not the initial NP, triggers the honorific agreement with the verb. I argue that the first NP of the construction is identified as a sentential specifier which exists in addition to the s...
متن کاملInformation focus in relational clause structure
Cross-linguistic studies of the recent decades have discovered a variety of split case marking systems, which mix nominative-accusative (S=A vs. P) and ergative-absolutive (A vs. S=P) groupings of core participant roles. The range of factors known to condition such splits in different languages includes the semantic nature of NP, its actual semantic role in the situation, tense/aspect/mood, and...
متن کاملScandinavian Clause Structure and Object Shift
This paper focusses on the theory of clause structure in Icelandic, contrasting it along the way with that of another Scandinavian language, Swedish. I argue that LFG provides a very simple and appealing account of two distinguishing properties of Icelandic: (i) the presence of two apparent subject positions in the `Transitive Expletive' construction, and (ii) the phenomenon of `Object Shift', ...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Mandenkan
سال: 2014
ISSN: 0752-5443,2104-371X
DOI: 10.4000/mandenkan.568