05028nam 2200685Ia 450 991079208600332120230802012857.01-283-59428-5978661390673190-272-7348-0(CKB)2560000000093326(EBL)1013046(OCoLC)809617693(SSID)ssj0000711672(PQKBManifestationID)12304711(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000711672(PQKBWorkID)10722442(PQKB)10217555(MiAaPQ)EBC1013046(Au-PeEL)EBL1013046(CaPaEBR)ebr10595302(CaONFJC)MIL390673(EXLCZ)99256000000009332620120613d2012 uy 0engurcn|||||||||txtccrThe passive in Japanese[electronic resource] a cartographic minimalist approach /Tomoko IshizukaAmsterdam ;Philadelphia John Benjamins20121 online resource (265 p.)Linguistik aktuell/linguistics today (LA) ;v. 192Description based upon print version of record.90-272-5575-X Includes bibliographical references and index.The Passive in Japanese; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; List of tables; Abbreviations; A modular analysis of the passive in Japanese; Acknowledgments; Towards a unified theory of Japanese passives; 1.1. The general research program; 1.2. Modularity of grammar; 1.3. The passive voice system in Japanese; 1.3.1. The traditional dichotomy; 1.4. Coalescing the two types of passives; 1.4.1. The polysemy of -rare; 1.4.2. Distributional differences between -rare and -sase; 1.4.3. Indirect passives are pseudo- and genitive passives; 1.5. Research questions1.6. Framework and theoretical tools 1.6.1. The principles and parameters treatment of English passives; 1.6.2. Collins' (2005) smuggling analysis; 1.7. The proposed analysis; 1.7.1. Lexical properties of -rare; 1.7.2. General properties interacting with -rare; 1.7.3. What -rare does not do; 1.8. The data: Grammaticality judgment surveys; 1.9. Outline of the book; The passive morpheme -rare; 2.1. The distribution of -rare; 2.2. The passive -rare is always a functional element; 2.3. -rare as a voice head; 2.3.1. Establishing a pattern with long passivization; 2.3.2. -rare instantiates voice2.4. Lexical properties of -rare 2.4.1. Complementation properties of -rare; 2.4.2. The EPP feature of -rare; 2.4.3. Introducing a dative projection; 2.5. Subject honorifics; 2.6. Summary of the chapter; The derived subject in the passive; 3.1. General properties of Japanese; 3.1.1. The absence of an expletive; 3.1.2. Movement and case; 3.2. The accusative passive; 3.3. Dative and source passives derived from ditransitive verbs; 3.3.1. Addressee of `verbs of speaking'; 3.3.2. Theme-raising of the passivized ditransitive verb; 3.3.3. The source passive; 3.4. Passivization of causatives3.5. Pseudo-passives: Passives with intransitives3.5.1. English pseudo-passives; 3.5.2. Japanese passives derived from obliques; 3.5.3. Postpositional objects incompatible with pseudo-passives; 3.6. The genitive passive; 3.6.1. Genitive passives disguised: Passives requiring context; 3.7. Extra-thematic nominative DPs; 3.8. Summary of the chapter; Ni-passives, ni-yotte-passives, and short passives; 4.1. The ni-phrase; 4.2. The kara-phrase; 4.3. Short passives and ni-yotte passives; 4.3.1. Short passives; 4.3.2. Ni-yotte passives; Revisiting the literature; 5.1. The traditional classification5.2. Traditional analyses 5.2.1. The standard analysis of indirect passives; 5.2.2. Standard analyses of direct passives; 5.2.3. Standard analyses of possessive passives; 5.3. Are indirect passives special?; 5.3.1. Numeral Quantifier Floating; 5.3.2. The distribution of ni-phrases; 5.4. Summary of the chapter; Further support for movement; 6.1. The gap is a trace; 6.1.1. Is the gap a pro?; 6.2. Reconstruction effects; 6.2.1. Scope interactions; 6.2.2. Idiom reconstruction; 6.2.3. The distributive morpheme zutu; 6.3. A- vs. A-movement; 6.3.1. Reanalyzing long-distance passivization6.4. Does -rare select for an argument?Linguistik aktuell ;Bd. 192.Japanese languageVoiceJapanese languagePassive voiceJapanese languageGrammarJapanese languageSyntaxJapanese languageVoice.Japanese languagePassive voice.Japanese languageGrammar.Japanese languageSyntax.495.6/56Ishizuka Tomoko1968-1519995MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910792086003321The passive in Japanese3758416UNINA