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Papers from the 2009 Debrecen Conference [[electronic resource] /] / edited by Tibor Laczkó, Catherine O. Ringen ; with the assistance of György Rákosi
Papers from the 2009 Debrecen Conference [[electronic resource] /] / edited by Tibor Laczkó, Catherine O. Ringen ; with the assistance of György Rákosi
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam, : John Benjamins Pub. Co., 2011
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (252 p.)
Disciplina 494
Altri autori (Persone) LaczkóTibor
RingenCatherine O
RákosiGyörgy
Collana Approaches to Hungarian
Soggetto topico Hungarian language - Grammar
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 1-283-36004-7
9786613360045
90-272-8507-1
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Approaches to Hungarian; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; Introduction; References; Hungarian external causatives; 1. Introduction; 2. Horváth & Siloni's arguments; 2.1 What H&S got perfectly right: The 'biclausality vs. monoclausality' issue; 2.1.1 The number of negation domains; 2.1.2 The number of binding domains; 2.2 Where H&S are wrong: Bi-eventivity vs. mono-eventivity; 2.2.1 Control of subjects in participials; 2.2.2 Event modifiability by adverbials; 2.3 Some further observations and claims by H&S - and their assessment; 2.3.1 Coordination below causation
2.3.2 VP-deletion2.3.3 Raising verbs: No causatives; 2.3.4 And a final minor point; 3. A modest proposal for the syntactic derivation of Hungarian external causatives; 3.1 The basics; 3.2 The case patterns of Hungarian external causatives; 3.3 Adverbial modification in Hungarian causatives; 3.3.1 Access of adverbials to the two subevents (cf. 2.2.2 above); 3.3.2 Control into adverbial modifiers; 3.4 Causatives of control verbs; 4. Conclusion; References; (The non-existence of) secondary stress in Hungarian; 1. Secondary stress in Hungarian; 2. Phonological evidence for secondary stress?
2.1 The 'patronising' intonation pattern2.2 Varga (2000): Problems; 3. Experiments; 3.1 Method; 3.2 Phonetic evidence for stress: Preliminary study; 3.3 Statistical methodology; 3.4 Phonetic evidence for stress: The second study; 3.4.1 Words with a heavy third syllable; 3.4.2 Words with a light third syllable; 3.5 Summary of the experiments; 4. Conclusions and further research; References; The syntax-prosody interface and sentential complementation in Hungarian; 1. Introduction; 2. Background; 2.1 The syntax of object clauses; 2.2 Factivity, givenness and referentiality
3.1 Background and definitions3. Referential and non-referential clauses; 3.2 The referentiality of sentential complements in Hungarian; 4. Experiment; 4.1 Stimuli; 4.2 Methods; 4.3 Results; I. No significant prosodic effects of factivity; II. Givenness effects are independent of factivity; III. Prosodic difference between NCP vs RCP; 5. Conclusions; References; On a type of counterfactual construction; 1. Aim; 2. Facts to be accounted for; 3. Which mood is it?; 4. The syntax of mood in universal grammar; 5. The syntax of Hungarian optative sentences
6. The syntax of Hungarian imperative sentences7. The syntax of 'reproaching' sentences; 8. Summary; References; Result states in Hungarian; 1. Result states: a proposal; 2. Temporal modi?ers ending in -rA 'subl'; 2.1 The actuality-based use; 2.2 The intention-based use; 2.3 The incorporated use; 2.4 A fourth use?; 3. Comparisons; 3.1 Kiefer (2006); 3.2 Bende-Farkas (2007); 4. Potential empirical problems; 4.1 ki·vasal 'out-iron'; 4.2 be·csuk 'in-shut' versus be·csap 'in-slam'; 4.3 be·bizonyít 'prev-prove'; References; Paradigmatic variation in Hungarian; 1. Introduction
2. Theoretical background
Record Nr. UNINA-9910457368703321
Amsterdam, : John Benjamins Pub. Co., 2011
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Papers from the 2009 Debrecen Conference / / edited by Tibor Laczkó, Catherine O. Ringen ; with the assistance of György Rákosi
Papers from the 2009 Debrecen Conference / / edited by Tibor Laczkó, Catherine O. Ringen ; with the assistance of György Rákosi
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam : , : John Benjamins Pub. Co., , 2011
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (252 pages) : illustrations
Disciplina 494
Altri autori (Persone) LaczkóTibor
RingenCatherine O <1943-> (Catherine Oleson)
RákosiGyörgy <1977->
Collana Approaches to Hungarian
Soggetto topico Hungarian language - Grammar
ISBN 1-283-36004-7
9786613360045
90-272-8507-1
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Approaches to Hungarian; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; Introduction; References; Hungarian external causatives; 1. Introduction; 2. Horváth & Siloni's arguments; 2.1 What H&S got perfectly right: The 'biclausality vs. monoclausality' issue; 2.1.1 The number of negation domains; 2.1.2 The number of binding domains; 2.2 Where H&S are wrong: Bi-eventivity vs. mono-eventivity; 2.2.1 Control of subjects in participials; 2.2.2 Event modifiability by adverbials; 2.3 Some further observations and claims by H&S - and their assessment; 2.3.1 Coordination below causation
2.3.2 VP-deletion 2.3.3 Raising verbs: No causatives; 2.3.4 And a final minor point; 3. A modest proposal for the syntactic derivation of Hungarian external causatives; 3.1 The basics; 3.2 The case patterns of Hungarian external causatives; 3.3 Adverbial modification in Hungarian causatives; 3.3.1 Access of adverbials to the two subevents (cf. 2.2.2 above); 3.3.2 Control into adverbial modifiers; 3.4 Causatives of control verbs; 4. Conclusion; References; (The non-existence of) secondary stress in Hungarian; 1. Secondary stress in Hungarian; 2. Phonological evidence for secondary stress?
2.1 The 'patronising' intonation pattern 2.2 Varga (2000): Problems; 3. Experiments; 3.1 Method; 3.2 Phonetic evidence for stress: Preliminary study; 3.3 Statistical methodology; 3.4 Phonetic evidence for stress: The second study; 3.4.1 Words with a heavy third syllable; 3.4.2 Words with a light third syllable; 3.5 Summary of the experiments; 4. Conclusions and further research; References; The syntax-prosody interface and sentential complementation in Hungarian; 1. Introduction; 2. Background; 2.1 The syntax of object clauses; 2.2 Factivity, givenness and referentiality
3.1 Background and definitions 3. Referential and non-referential clauses; 3.2 The referentiality of sentential complements in Hungarian; 4. Experiment; 4.1 Stimuli; 4.2 Methods; 4.3 Results; I. No significant prosodic effects of factivity; II. Givenness effects are independent of factivity; III. Prosodic difference between NCP vs RCP; 5. Conclusions; References; On a type of counterfactual construction; 1. Aim; 2. Facts to be accounted for; 3. Which mood is it?; 4. The syntax of mood in universal grammar; 5. The syntax of Hungarian optative sentences
6. The syntax of Hungarian imperative sentences 7. The syntax of 'reproaching' sentences; 8. Summary; References; Result states in Hungarian; 1. Result states: a proposal; 2. Temporal modi?ers ending in -rA 'subl'; 2.1 The actuality-based use; 2.2 The intention-based use; 2.3 The incorporated use; 2.4 A fourth use?; 3. Comparisons; 3.1 Kiefer (2006); 3.2 Bende-Farkas (2007); 4. Potential empirical problems; 4.1 ki·vasal 'out-iron'; 4.2 be·csuk 'in-shut' versus be·csap 'in-slam'; 4.3 be·bizonyít 'prev-prove'; References; Paradigmatic variation in Hungarian; 1. Introduction ; 2. Theoretical background
Record Nr. UNINA-9910781432403321
Amsterdam : , : John Benjamins Pub. Co., , 2011
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Papers from the 2009 Debrecen Conference / / edited by Tibor Laczkó, Catherine O. Ringen ; with the assistance of György Rákosi
Papers from the 2009 Debrecen Conference / / edited by Tibor Laczkó, Catherine O. Ringen ; with the assistance of György Rákosi
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam : , : John Benjamins Pub. Co., , 2011
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (252 pages) : illustrations
Disciplina 494
Altri autori (Persone) LaczkóTibor
RingenCatherine O <1943-> (Catherine Oleson)
RákosiGyörgy <1977->
Collana Approaches to Hungarian
Soggetto topico Hungarian language - Grammar
ISBN 1-283-36004-7
9786613360045
90-272-8507-1
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Approaches to Hungarian; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; Introduction; References; Hungarian external causatives; 1. Introduction; 2. Horváth & Siloni's arguments; 2.1 What H&S got perfectly right: The 'biclausality vs. monoclausality' issue; 2.1.1 The number of negation domains; 2.1.2 The number of binding domains; 2.2 Where H&S are wrong: Bi-eventivity vs. mono-eventivity; 2.2.1 Control of subjects in participials; 2.2.2 Event modifiability by adverbials; 2.3 Some further observations and claims by H&S - and their assessment; 2.3.1 Coordination below causation
2.3.2 VP-deletion 2.3.3 Raising verbs: No causatives; 2.3.4 And a final minor point; 3. A modest proposal for the syntactic derivation of Hungarian external causatives; 3.1 The basics; 3.2 The case patterns of Hungarian external causatives; 3.3 Adverbial modification in Hungarian causatives; 3.3.1 Access of adverbials to the two subevents (cf. 2.2.2 above); 3.3.2 Control into adverbial modifiers; 3.4 Causatives of control verbs; 4. Conclusion; References; (The non-existence of) secondary stress in Hungarian; 1. Secondary stress in Hungarian; 2. Phonological evidence for secondary stress?
2.1 The 'patronising' intonation pattern 2.2 Varga (2000): Problems; 3. Experiments; 3.1 Method; 3.2 Phonetic evidence for stress: Preliminary study; 3.3 Statistical methodology; 3.4 Phonetic evidence for stress: The second study; 3.4.1 Words with a heavy third syllable; 3.4.2 Words with a light third syllable; 3.5 Summary of the experiments; 4. Conclusions and further research; References; The syntax-prosody interface and sentential complementation in Hungarian; 1. Introduction; 2. Background; 2.1 The syntax of object clauses; 2.2 Factivity, givenness and referentiality
3.1 Background and definitions 3. Referential and non-referential clauses; 3.2 The referentiality of sentential complements in Hungarian; 4. Experiment; 4.1 Stimuli; 4.2 Methods; 4.3 Results; I. No significant prosodic effects of factivity; II. Givenness effects are independent of factivity; III. Prosodic difference between NCP vs RCP; 5. Conclusions; References; On a type of counterfactual construction; 1. Aim; 2. Facts to be accounted for; 3. Which mood is it?; 4. The syntax of mood in universal grammar; 5. The syntax of Hungarian optative sentences
6. The syntax of Hungarian imperative sentences 7. The syntax of 'reproaching' sentences; 8. Summary; References; Result states in Hungarian; 1. Result states: a proposal; 2. Temporal modi?ers ending in -rA 'subl'; 2.1 The actuality-based use; 2.2 The intention-based use; 2.3 The incorporated use; 2.4 A fourth use?; 3. Comparisons; 3.1 Kiefer (2006); 3.2 Bende-Farkas (2007); 4. Potential empirical problems; 4.1 ki·vasal 'out-iron'; 4.2 be·csuk 'in-shut' versus be·csap 'in-slam'; 4.3 be·bizonyít 'prev-prove'; References; Paradigmatic variation in Hungarian; 1. Introduction ; 2. Theoretical background
Record Nr. UNINA-9910821506403321
Amsterdam : , : John Benjamins Pub. Co., , 2011
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui