1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910963730803321

Titolo

Theoretical approaches to universals / / edited by Artemis Alexiadou

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, PA, : J. Benjamins Pub., c2002

ISBN

9786612254581

9780585462493

0585462496

9781282254589

1282254588

9789027297563

9027297568

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

viii, 316 p. : ill

Collana

Linguistik aktuell, , 0166-0829 = Linguistics today ; ; v. 49

Altri autori (Persone)

AlexiadouArtemis

Disciplina

415/.01

Soggetti

Linguistic universals

Grammar, Comparative and general

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Papers from a conference on universals organized by the Research Center for General Linguistics, the Linguistics Department of the University of Potsdam and the Dutch Graduate School in Linguistics and hosted in Berlin in March 1999.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Theoretical Approaches to Universals -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- List of contributors -- Introduction -- Universal features and language-particular morphemes -- Agree or attract? -- Distributed deletion -- Roots, constituents, and c-command -- A four-way classification of monadic verbs -- On Agreement -- A minimalist account of conflation processes -- Morphological constraints on syntactic derivations -- Intermediate traces, reconstruction and locality effects -- Index -- Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today.

Sommario/riassunto

The present volume has its origin in the GLOW conference on Universals hosted in Berlin in March 1999. The papers in this volume are concerned both with formal as well as with substantive universals. All the contributions attempt to identify universal properties of the language faculty, as well as the source of cross-linguistic variation.



They cover a wide range of empirical phenomena across languages such as locality, deletion, verb classes, XP-split constructions, Quantifier Raising, the EPP, the Person Case Constraint etc. Some of the articles pay particular attention to the organization of the grammar, the type of operations that are effective, the role of features in determining variation, and primitive notions of phrase-structure (c-command, Agree etc.). Others show how structural differences capture semantic and morphological differences within a language and across languages, and how these are the ultimate source of linguistic variation. The book is of primary interest to researchers and students in syntactic theory, comparative syntax, and linguistic variation.