00867cam0 2200241 450 E60020002522220200831070751.020070208d1963 |||||ita|0103 baitaITNapoli alla riscossa ovvero Le quattro giornatesaggio storico della rivoluzione napoletana del settembre 1943Mario OrbitelloNapoliTreves[1963]208 p.tav.21 cmOrbitello, MarioA600200040764070408574ITUNISOB20200831RICAUNISOBUNISOB90065629E600200025222M 102 Monografia moderna SBNM900002112Si65629donoOpregresso1UNISOBUNISOB20070208110225.020180518111657.0bethbNapoli alla riscossa ovvero "Le Quattro Giornate"1687012UNISOB06139nam 2200829 a 450 991095581940332120240516213254.09786613851918978128353946312835394629789027273451902727345610.1075/la.193(CKB)2560000000091089(EBL)988856(OCoLC)804661315(SSID)ssj0000701663(PQKBManifestationID)12258340(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000701663(PQKBWorkID)10675072(PQKB)10009247(MiAaPQ)EBC988856(Au-PeEL)EBL988856(CaPaEBR)ebr10587975(CaONFJC)MIL385191(DE-B1597)721158(DE-B1597)9789027273451(EXLCZ)99256000000009108920120606d2012 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrOn the grammar of optative constructions /Patrick Georg Grosz1st ed.Amsterdam ;Philadelphia John Benjamins Pub. Co.20121 online resource (358 p.)Linguistik aktuell/linguistics today (la) ;193Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2011.9789027255761 9027255768 Includes bibliographical references and index.On the Grammar of Optative Constructions; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; Acknowledgments; Abbreviations; Introduction; Prolegomena; 2.1 Optatives - definitions and illustrations; 2.1.1 Optative basics: Introducing if-, that- and V1-optatives; 2.1.2 If-optatives are not optative conditionals; 2.1.3 Cautionary remarks on optative mood and clause type; 2.1.4 Interim summary and terminological clarifications; 2.2 Dispelling the idiom hypothesis; 2.3 The next of kin - introducing polar exclamatives; 2.4 Interim summary; The core analysis3.1 The EX-Op analysis: A bird's-eye view3.1.1 The aim of this project; 3.1.2 The system in a nutshell; 3.1.3 On the cognition-emotion dichotomy; 3.1.4 The views of others: How to classify this type of analysis; 3.2 The EX-Op analysis: A worm's-eye view; 3.2.1 In a nutshell; 3.2.2 Introducing EX; 3.2.3 The role of particles in exclamations; 3.2.4 The role of mood in exclamations; 3.3 Summary and road map; The source of desirability in optatives; 4.1 On expressing emotion, EX and generalized exclamations; 4.1.1 The core puzzle: Attitudes without attitude predicates; 4.1.2 Core proposal4.1.3 Optative clauses behave like complement clauses4.1.3.1 On polarity in optatives; 4.1.3.2 On inversion in optatives; 4.1.3.3 On morphological tense and mood in optatives; 4.1.3.4 On the range of functions for EX-utterances; 4.1.3.5 Interim summary; 4.1.4 Optative clauses do not involve matrix clause deletion; 4.1.4.1 The core argument against matrix clause deletion; 4.1.4.2 Scholz's evidence against matrix clause deletion; 4.1.4.3 Rifkin's evidence against matrix clause deletion; 4.1.4.4 Interim summary; 4.1.5 Introducing EX - An emotive operator; 4.1.6 The EX operator is expressive4.1.6.1 On the non-truth-functionality of exclamations4.1.6.2 Non-embeddability: A hallmark of expressive content and exclamations; 4.1.6.3 A brief review of other markers of expressive meaning; 4.1.7 The EX operator is scalar; 4.1.8 On the role of interjections and other prototypical elements; 4.1.9 Formal matters: What is in EX and what isn't; 4.1.10 Two types of optatives: EX-optatives and Adv-optatives; 4.1.11 Summary; 4.2 An alternative: Deriving desirability from the pragmatics; 4.2.1 Biezma (2011ab) in a nutshell; 4.2.2 Are optatives conditionals?4.2.3 Do optatives involve reversed topicality?4.2.4 Can we derive desirability from the discourse?; On the role of mood in exclamations; 5.1 The core proposal: Connecting V to C via mood; 5.1.1 Two puzzles; 5.1.2 One solution (in a nutshell); 5.1.3 A split mood realization system in German exclamations; 5.1.4 Generalized split-TAM; 5.1.5 Syntactic implementation - on mood movement and V1; 5.1.6 On the content of C; 5.1.7 Interim summary; 5.2 Mood selection; 5.2.1 Out in the optative left field: An apparent selection problem; 5.2.2 Towards a solution5.3 Mood, exclamations and the connection to verb secondThis monograph is one of the first theoretical studies of optatives. Optative constructions express desire without an overt lexical item that means 'desire'. The author specifically investigates optatives with the syntax of embedded clauses that contain prototypical particles such as 'only'. He rejects the view that optativity arises compositionally from the standard semantics of embedded clauses and prototypical particles. The following system is proposed: Desirability is due to a generalized scalar exclamation operator EX. Furthermore, clausal properties such as factivity/counterfactuality aLinguistik aktuell ;Bd. 193.Grammar, Comparative and generalMoodGrammar, Comparative and generalSubordinate constructionsGrammar, Comparative and generalSubjunctiveGrammar, Comparative and generalTenseEnglish languageGrammar, ComparativeGerman languageGrammar, ComparativeGrammar, Comparative and generalMood.Grammar, Comparative and generalSubordinate constructions.Grammar, Comparative and generalSubjunctive.Grammar, Comparative and generalTense.English languageGrammar, Comparative.German languageGrammar, Comparative.415/.6Grosz Patrick Georg1623766MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910955819403321On the grammar of optative constructions4347066UNINA