05750nam 2200709 450 991079117900332120200520144314.090-272-7029-5(CKB)2550000001331913(EBL)1744748(SSID)ssj0001262108(PQKBManifestationID)12484302(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001262108(PQKBWorkID)11210191(PQKB)10187971(Au-PeEL)EBL1744748(CaPaEBR)ebr10896757(CaONFJC)MIL629009(OCoLC)884548349(MiAaPQ)EBC1744748(EXLCZ)99255000000133191320140730h20142014 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrLeft sentence peripheries in Spanish diachronic, variationist and comparative perspectives /edited by Andreas Dufter, Álvaro S. Octavio de ToledoAmsterdam, Netherlands ;Philadelphia, Pennsylvania :John Benjamins Publishing Company,2014.©20141 online resource (431 p.)Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today ;Volume 214Description based upon print version of record.90-272-5597-0 1-306-97758-4 Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and index.Left Sentence Peripheries in Spanish; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents ; Preface ; Introduction ; 1. From Latin to Spanish ; 2. Aspects of Modern Spanish clause structure ; 3. Syntax and its interfaces with semantics and pragmatics ; 4. Spanish and its closest relatives ; References ; Section 1. Left Sentence Peripheries in Old Spanish; Chapter 1. Left Dislocation phenomena in Old Spanish ; 1. Introduction ; 2. Structural properties of Left Dislocations in Modern Spanish ; 2.1 Category of left-dislocate and case-marking ; 2.2 Resumptive constituents ; 2.3 Recursivity2.4 Distribution 2.5 Island sensitivity ; 3. Left Dislocations in Old Spanish ; 3.1 Corpus ; 3.2 Left Dislocations relative to other word order phenomena ; 3.3 Structural properties ; 4. Conclusions ; Corpora ; References ; Chapter 2. Revisiting stylistic fronting in Old Spanish; 1. Introduction ; 2. Properties of Stylistic Fronting ; 2.1 Clause-boundedness ; 2.2 Focus not required ; 2.3 Relativized Minimality ; 2.4 Head movement ; 2.5 The subject gap restriction ; 2.6 The subject gap restriction in null-subject languages ; 3. Previous explanations ; 3.1 The trigger for SF synchronically3.2 The loss of SF diachronically 4. Towards an explanation ; 4.1 Theoretical considerations ; 4.2 Empirical considerations ; 4.3 Feature-driven movement ; 5. Conclusion ; References ; Appendix ; Questionnaire ; Chapter 3. Left forever; 1. Pronoun redundancy: Basic synchronic data ; 2. Doubling and focus ; 3. Clitic doubling in the Middle Ages ; 4. The attraction to the left position ; 5. Clitic doubling as agreement ; 6. Concluding remarks ; References ; Medieval sources ; References ; Section 2. Syntactic variation in Modern SpanishChapter4. Spanish predicative verbless clauses and the left periphery 1. Introduction ; 2. The grammar of Spanish Predicative Verbless Clauses ; 2.1 The XP-predicate ; 2.2 The DP-subject ; 2.3 Syntactic structure ; 2.4 The information structure of Spanish Predicative Verbless Clauses ; 3. Previous syntactic accounts ; 3.1 Right-dislocated DP ; 3.2 Subject-Predicate movement ; 3.3 Two independent clauses ; 3.4 Small clause analysis ; 4. Toward a new proposal ; 5. Conclusion ; References ; Chapter 5. Fronting and contrastively focused secondary predicates in Spanish; 1. Introduction2. Contrastive focus and fronting in Spanish 3. Secondary predicates and information structure ; 4. Empirical study ; 4.1 Method and setup ; 4.2 Results ; 4.3 Discussion ; 5. Conclusion ; References ; Chapter 6. The left periphery of Spanish comparative correlatives; 1. Introduction ; 2. Analysis ; 2.1 The correlative tanto ... cuanto ... ; 2.2 The role of the comparative degree heads más 'more' and menos 'less' ; 3. The left periphery ; 3.1 Focusing tanto más ; 3.2 The position of the correlative sentence ; 4. Further consequences of the proposal ; ReferencesChapter 7. The article at the left peripheryThe aim of this paper is to describe the syntax and semantics of Focus Fronting (FF) constructions in a range of Romance languages, including both regional and diachronic varieties, in order to reclassify these constructions on the basis of a common comparative ground. I shall begin with a look at some Sardinian data, mostly already presented in earlier research literature, since this Romance language uses FF in more contexts than other Modern Romance varieties. Sardinian not only employs FF with argumental and adjunct constituents, but also with predicates. Moreover, Sardinian FF does not necLinguistik aktuell/Linguistics today ;Volueme 214.Spanish languageSyntaxSpanish languageSentencesSpanish languageVerbSpanish languageWord orderSpanish languageSyntax.Spanish languageSentences.Spanish languageVerb.Spanish languageWord order.465Dufter AndreasOctavio de Toledo AÌvaroMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910791179003321Left sentence peripheries in Spanish3863886UNINA