01580nam 2200337 n 450 99639325850331620221108071912.0(CKB)4940000000113457(EEBO)2264215719(UnM)9958566900971(EXLCZ)99494000000011345719971118d1685 uh engurbn||||a|bb|By the Lords Justices and Council. Mich. Armach. C. Granard[electronic resource] Whereas we the Lords Justices have lately received a proclamation, published by his Majesty in England, dated the sixteenth day of June, 1685. Which followeth in these words. James R. Whereas an humble address hath been made ..Dublin, Printed by Benjamin Tooke, printer to the Kings most excellent Majesty; and are to be sold by Andrew Crook and Samuel Helsham, at the Colledge-Arms in Castle-Street.[1685]1 sheet ([1] p.)At end of text: Given at the Council-Chamber in Dublin, the 22th day of June, 1685.Arms 187.Reproduction of original in the British Library.eebo-0018Monmouth's Rebellion, 1685Early works to 1800Great BritainHistoryJames II, 1685-1688Early works to 1800Monmouth's Rebellion, 1685England and Wales.Sovereign (1685-1688 : James II).Cu-RivESCu-RivESBOOK996393258503316By the Lords Justices and Council. Mich. Armach. C. Granard2325816UNISA07258nam 2200541Ia 450 991081524620332120200520144314.01-282-16065-6978661216065390-272-9578-6(CKB)1000000000550779(OCoLC)70771524(CaPaEBR)ebrary10052848(MiAaPQ)EBC623012(iGPub)JOBE0001891(EXLCZ)99100000000055077920030821d2003 uy 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierProlific domains on the anti-locality of movement dependencies /Kleanthes K. Grohmann1st ed.Amsterdam ;Philadelphia J. Benjamins20031 online resource (388 p.)Linguistik aktuell =Linguistics today,0166-0829 ;v. 61-58811-441-4 90-272-2789-6 Includes bibliographical references and index.Prolific Domains -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC page -- Epigraph -- Table of contents -- Preface -- Abbreviations -- Locality in grammar -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Movement dependencies -- 2.1. Not so local: A'-movement -- 2.2. Quite local: A-movement -- 2.3. Very local: X0-movement -- 3. Rules of construal -- 4. Standard Locality -- 5. Anti-Locality -- 5.1. Anti-Locality in thematic dependencies -- 5.2. Anti-Locality in agreement dependencies -- 5.3. Anti-Locality in discourse dependencies -- 5.4. The Anti-Locality Hypothesis -- 6. The lay of the land -- Notes -- Rigorous Minimalism and Anti-Locality -- 1. Introduction -- 2. A rigorous pursuit of minimalist desiderata -- 2.1. Architecture of the grammar -- 2.2. The computational system in action -- 2.3. Economy in a theory of grammar -- 2.4. Bare output conditions and movement -- 3. A minimalisticized X'-Theory -- 3.1. Reconsidering (Bare) Phrase Structure -- 3.2. Interpreting Agr -- 3.3. Phrase structure -- 3.4. Natural Relations -- 3.5. Checking configurations -- 3.6. Some consequences -- 3.7. Summary -- 4. Towards a theory of Anti-Locality -- 4.1. Prolific Domains -- 4.2. Exclusivity -- 4.3. On the internal architecture of Prolific Domains -- 4.4. Summary -- 5. Conclusion -- Notes -- Anti-Locality in anaphoric dependencies -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Returning to the CDE -- 3. Derivational approaches to local anaphors -- 3.1. The ``Rule of Reflexivization'' -- 3.2. A derivational analysis of reflexives -- 3.3. A derivational analysis of reciprocals -- 4. Copy Spell Out in the Theta-Domain -- 4.1. The CDE and local anaphors -- 4.2. Which analysis to choose? -- 4.3. Deriving reflexive ECM-subjects -- 4.4. The role of inherent reflexives -- 4.5. A glance at some related issues -- 4.6. Preliminary considerations of ``default fillers'' -- 5. Conclusion -- Notes.Copy Spell Out and left dislocation -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Types of left dislocation -- 2.1. A tripartition of LD constructions -- 2.2. Topicalization vs. left dislocation -- 2.3. Movement in topicalization -- 2.4. Topicalization vs. HTLD -- 3. The relevance of CLD and CLLD -- 3.1. CLD vs. topicalization -- 3.2. CLD vs. HTLD -- 3.3. A first glance at CLD vs. CLLD -- 3.4. Summary -- 4. Copy Spell Out in the Omega-Domain -- 4.1. Exclusivity: Towards a derivational analysis -- 4.2. Derivational issues, again -- 4.3. CLD vs. HTLD revisited -- 4.4. p- vs. d-pronoun -- 4.5. Selection issues -- 4.6. Summary -- 5. Conclusion -- Notes -- The Anti-Locality of clitic left dislocation -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Copy Spell Out in the Phi-Domain -- 2.1. Movement vs. construal -- 2.2. CLLD vs. CLD: A difference in Prolific Domains -- 2.3. A derivational approach to CLLD -- 3. Left dislocation constructions: An anti-local perspective -- 4. Conclusion -- Notes -- Prolific Domains in the nominal layer -- 1. Introduction -- 2. PPD: Pronominal doubling of possessors -- 2.1. A first note on the structure of the PPDed DP -- 2.2. Morphosyntactic properties of PPD -- 2.3. Phrase-structural properties -- 3. The Clausal-DP Hypothesis -- 4. An Anti-Locality approach to PPDs -- 5. Supporting Copy Spell Out in PPD -- 6. Conclusion -- Notes -- Successive cyclicity revisited -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Successive cyclicity in the theory of grammar -- 2.1. A brief history of successive cyclicity -- 2.2. Minimalist problems with successive cyclicity -- 2.3. An incomplete generalization -- 3. Anti-Locality and Intra-Clausal Movement -- 3.1. Movement within Prolific Domains -- 3.2. Movement across Prolific Domains -- 3.3. The Intra-Clausal Movement Hypothesis -- 4. An anti-local perspective on inter-clausal movement -- 4.1. The Inter-Clausal Movement Generalization.4.2. Long-distance Wh-movement -- 4.3. Raising to subject -- 4.4. Control structures -- 4.5. Raising vs. control -- 4.6. Exceptional Case-marking: Raising to object -- 5. An extension to small clauses -- 5.1. The issue -- 5.2. Small structures -- 5.3. Small analysis -- 5.4. Complex structures? -- 5.5. Small structures, again -- 5.6. A final note -- 6. Conclusion -- Notes -- A note on dynamic syntax -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Prolific Domains: The framework -- 3. Syntax at the interfaces: A sketch -- 4. Exclusivity, (Anti-)Locality, and cyclicity -- 5. Derivational dependencies -- 5.1. Sideward movement -- 5.2. An ontology of derivational dependencies -- 5.3. Towards a theory of intra- and inter-clausal movement -- 6. Conclusion -- Notes -- Final remarks -- References -- Name index -- Language index -- Subject index -- The series LINGUISTIK AKTUELL/LINGUISTICS TODAY.Standard conceptions of Locality aim to establish that a dependency between two positions may not span too long a distance. This book explores the opposite conception, Anti-Locality: Don't move too close. The model of clause structure, syntactic computation, and locality concerns Kleanthes Grohmann develops makes crucial use of derivational sub-domains, Prolific Domains, each encapsulating particular context information (thematic, agreement, discourse). The Anti-Locality Hypothesis is the attempt to exclude anti-local movement from the grammar by banning movement within a Prolific Domain, a Bare Output Condition. The flexible application of the operation Spell Out, coupled with an innovative view on grammatical formatives, leads to a natural caveat: Copy Spell Out. Grohmann explores a theory of Anti-Locality relevant to all three Prolific Domains in the clausal layer as well as the nominal layer, and offers a unified account of Standard and Anti-Locality regarding clause-internal movement and operations across clause boundaries, revisiting successive cyclicity.Linguistik aktuell ;Bd. 66.Grammar, Comparative and generalSyntaxMinimalist theory (Linguistics)Grammar, Comparative and generalSyntax.Minimalist theory (Linguistics)415Grohmann Kleanthes K508357MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910815246203321Prolific Domains4072816UNINA