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Approaches to Hungarian . Volume 16 : Papers from the 2017 Budapest Conference / / edited by Veronika Hegedus, Irene Vogel
Approaches to Hungarian . Volume 16 : Papers from the 2017 Budapest Conference / / edited by Veronika Hegedus, Irene Vogel
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , 2020
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (233 pages) : illustrations
Disciplina 494.5115
Soggetto topico Hungarian language - Grammar
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNINA-9910688569503321
Amsterdam : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , 2020
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Approaches to Hungarian . Volume 14 : papers from the 2013 Piliscsaba conference / / edited by Katalin É. Kiss, Balázs Surányi, Éva Dékány
Approaches to Hungarian . Volume 14 : papers from the 2013 Piliscsaba conference / / edited by Katalin É. Kiss, Balázs Surányi, Éva Dékány
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam, Netherlands ; ; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , 2015
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (302 p.)
Disciplina 408
Collana Approaches to Hungarian
Soggetto topico Hungarian language - Grammar
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 90-272-0484-5
90-272-6885-1
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; Arguments for arguments in the complement zone of the Hungarian nominal head; 1. Introduction; 2. Approaches to N-complements; 2.1 The Argument (Inheritance) Principle; 2.2 The complement zone of N in Hungarian: Is there any at all?; 2.3 Constituency tests in Hungarian; 2.4 When the "ill-formed" is quite well-formed (according to the literature); 3. Further potential tests concerning the constituent status of noun phrases with a non-empty complement zone; 3.1 Right periphery
4.4.3 Are first and second person different from third person?4.5 Interim summary; 5. Conclusions; Acknowledgements; References; Why do sonorants not voice in Hungarian? And why do they voice in Slovak?; 1. Introduction; 1.2 Pre-sonorant voicing; 1.2 Jansen's (2004) phonetically-based approach; 1.3 Voicing assimilation in Hungarian and Slovak; 2. Experiments; 2.1 Speakers; 2.2 Material; 2.3 Method; 2.4 Measurements; 2.5 Statistical analysis; 3. Results; 3.1 Utterance-final position; 3.2 Word-medial intervocalic position; 3.3 Word-final obstruents before /p/
3.4 Word-final obstruents before /b/3.5 Pre-sonorant position; 4. Discussion; 5. Conclusion; References; Appendix: Test sentences; Test sentences for Hungarian; Test sentences for Slovak; Word order variation in Hungarian PPs; 1. Introduction; 2. Variation in word order; 2.1 Variation in PP-internal word order; 2.2 Variation in positions in the clause; 2.3 Interim summary; 3. Analysis; 3.1 Background assumptions about PP structure; 3.2 Case-like Ps; 3.3 'Inflexible' case assigning Ps; 3.4 'Flexible' case assigning Ps that cannot be prepositions
3.5 'Flexible' case assigning Ps that can be prepositions
Record Nr. UNINA-9910493674503321
Amsterdam, Netherlands ; ; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , 2015
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Approaches to Hungarian . Volume 14 : papers from the 2013 Piliscsaba conference / / editors, Katalin É. Kiss, Balázs Surányi, Éva Dékány
Approaches to Hungarian . Volume 14 : papers from the 2013 Piliscsaba conference / / editors, Katalin É. Kiss, Balázs Surányi, Éva Dékány
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , 2015
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (302 pages)
Disciplina 408
Collana Approaches to Hungarian
Soggetto topico Hungarian language - Grammar
ISBN 90-272-0484-5
90-272-6885-1
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; Arguments for arguments in the complement zone of the Hungarian nominal head; 1. Introduction; 2. Approaches to N-complements; 2.1 The Argument (Inheritance) Principle; 2.2 The complement zone of N in Hungarian: Is there any at all?; 2.3 Constituency tests in Hungarian; 2.4 When the "ill-formed" is quite well-formed (according to the literature); 3. Further potential tests concerning the constituent status of noun phrases with a non-empty complement zone; 3.1 Right periphery
4.4.3 Are first and second person different from third person? 4.5 Interim summary; 5. Conclusions; Acknowledgements; References; Why do sonorants not voice in Hungarian? And why do they voice in Slovak?; 1. Introduction; 1.2 Pre-sonorant voicing; 1.2 Jansen's (2004) phonetically-based approach; 1.3 Voicing assimilation in Hungarian and Slovak; 2. Experiments; 2.1 Speakers; 2.2 Material; 2.3 Method; 2.4 Measurements; 2.5 Statistical analysis; 3. Results; 3.1 Utterance-final position; 3.2 Word-medial intervocalic position; 3.3 Word-final obstruents before /p/
3.4 Word-final obstruents before /b/3.5 Pre-sonorant position; 4. Discussion; 5. Conclusion; References; Appendix: Test sentences; Test sentences for Hungarian; Test sentences for Slovak; Word order variation in Hungarian PPs; 1. Introduction; 2. Variation in word order; 2.1 Variation in PP-internal word order; 2.2 Variation in positions in the clause; 2.3 Interim summary; 3. Analysis; 3.1 Background assumptions about PP structure; 3.2 Case-like Ps; 3.3 'Inflexible' case assigning Ps; 3.4 'Flexible' case assigning Ps that cannot be prepositions ; 3.5 'Flexible' case assigning Ps that can be prepositions
Record Nr. UNINA-9910788273303321
Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , 2015
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Approaches to Hungarian . Volume 14 : papers from the 2013 Piliscsaba conference / / editors, Katalin É. Kiss, Balázs Surányi, Éva Dékány
Approaches to Hungarian . Volume 14 : papers from the 2013 Piliscsaba conference / / editors, Katalin É. Kiss, Balázs Surányi, Éva Dékány
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , 2015
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (302 pages)
Disciplina 408
Collana Approaches to Hungarian
Soggetto topico Hungarian language - Grammar
ISBN 90-272-0484-5
90-272-6885-1
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; Arguments for arguments in the complement zone of the Hungarian nominal head; 1. Introduction; 2. Approaches to N-complements; 2.1 The Argument (Inheritance) Principle; 2.2 The complement zone of N in Hungarian: Is there any at all?; 2.3 Constituency tests in Hungarian; 2.4 When the "ill-formed" is quite well-formed (according to the literature); 3. Further potential tests concerning the constituent status of noun phrases with a non-empty complement zone; 3.1 Right periphery
4.4.3 Are first and second person different from third person? 4.5 Interim summary; 5. Conclusions; Acknowledgements; References; Why do sonorants not voice in Hungarian? And why do they voice in Slovak?; 1. Introduction; 1.2 Pre-sonorant voicing; 1.2 Jansen's (2004) phonetically-based approach; 1.3 Voicing assimilation in Hungarian and Slovak; 2. Experiments; 2.1 Speakers; 2.2 Material; 2.3 Method; 2.4 Measurements; 2.5 Statistical analysis; 3. Results; 3.1 Utterance-final position; 3.2 Word-medial intervocalic position; 3.3 Word-final obstruents before /p/
3.4 Word-final obstruents before /b/3.5 Pre-sonorant position; 4. Discussion; 5. Conclusion; References; Appendix: Test sentences; Test sentences for Hungarian; Test sentences for Slovak; Word order variation in Hungarian PPs; 1. Introduction; 2. Variation in word order; 2.1 Variation in PP-internal word order; 2.2 Variation in positions in the clause; 2.3 Interim summary; 3. Analysis; 3.1 Background assumptions about PP structure; 3.2 Case-like Ps; 3.3 'Inflexible' case assigning Ps; 3.4 'Flexible' case assigning Ps that cannot be prepositions ; 3.5 'Flexible' case assigning Ps that can be prepositions
Record Nr. UNINA-9910824187803321
Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , 2015
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Papers from the 2007 New York Conference [[electronic resource] /] / edited by Marcel den Dikken, Robert M. Vago
Papers from the 2007 New York Conference [[electronic resource] /] / edited by Marcel den Dikken, Robert M. Vago
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : John Benjamins, c2009
Descrizione fisica ix, 280 p. : ill
Disciplina 494/.5115
Altri autori (Persone) DikkenMarcel den <1965->
VagoRobert Michael
Collana Approaches to Hungarian
Soggetto topico Hungarian language - Grammar
Hungarian language - Syntax
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 1-282-44493-X
9786612444937
90-272-8887-9
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNINA-9910456735603321
Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : John Benjamins, c2009
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Papers from the 2007 New York Conference / / editors, Marcel den Dikken, Robert M. Vago
Papers from the 2007 New York Conference / / editors, Marcel den Dikken, Robert M. Vago
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia : , : John Benjamins, , 2009
Descrizione fisica ix, 280 pages : illustrations
Disciplina 494/.5115
Altri autori (Persone) DikkenMarcel den <1965->
VagoRobert Michael
Collana Approaches to Hungarian
Soggetto topico Hungarian language - Grammar
Hungarian language - Syntax
ISBN 1-282-44493-X
9786612444937
90-272-8887-9
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNINA-9910781200903321
Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia : , : John Benjamins, , 2009
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Papers from the 2007 New York Conference / / edited by Marcel den Dikken, Robert M. Vago
Papers from the 2007 New York Conference / / edited by Marcel den Dikken, Robert M. Vago
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : John Benjamins, c2009
Descrizione fisica ix, 280 pages : illustrations
Disciplina 494/.5115
Altri autori (Persone) DikkenMarcel den <1965->
VagoRobert Michael
Collana Approaches to Hungarian
Soggetto topico Hungarian language - Grammar
Hungarian language - Syntax
ISBN 1-282-44493-X
9786612444937
90-272-8887-9
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 -- Foreword -- Hungarian v -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Acoustic cues of the contrast between f and v -- 3. The voicing of Hungarian v in S__#: An acoustic experiment -- 3.1 Method -- 3.2 Results -- 3.3 Summary -- 4. The voicing of Hungarian v in S__#: A perception experiment -- 4.1. Method -- 4.2. Results -- 4.3 Summary and conclusions -- References -- Eliminating factivity from syntax* -- 1. Introduction -- 1.1 Background: Structural differences between factive and non-factive embedding -- 1.2 Cross-linguistic arguments for positing more complexity for non-factives -- 1.3 Our proposal: cP and CP -- 2. Hungarian -- 2.1 Evidence for cP in Hungarian sentential embedding constructions -- 2.2 The referential character of CP -- 2.3 Non-factive verbs with a CP complement -- 2.4 Wh-extraction and the wh-expletive construction -- 3. Summary and conclusion -- References -- Negative quantifiers in Hungarian* -- 1. Goal -- 2. The problems -- 3. Hungarian sentence structure -- 4. Theories of quantifier-raising -- 5. Negative quantifiers -- 5.1 Universal versus existential se-pronouns -- 5.2 The licensing of universal se-pronouns -- 5.3 The licensing of existential se-pronouns -- 6. The role of sem -- 7. Summary -- References -- Polarity particles in Hungarian* -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Context structure components -- 3. Assertions and polar questions -- 3.1 Assertion -- 3.2 Assertion confirmation and assertion reversal -- 3.3 Polar questions -- 3.4 Polar question confirmation and reversal -- 3.5 Assertions vs. polar questions -- 4. Echo assertions and their features -- 5. Hungarian polarity particles -- 5.1 The data -- 5.2 Account -- 6. Conclusion -- References -- Experimental evidence for recursion in prosody -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Recursion in prosody?.
3. Principles of the expression of recursion in prosody -- 4. Inherent grouping -- 5. Tonal patterns of grouping: Embedding and tonal continuity -- 6. Perception experiment 1: The violation of the principles determining the underlying properties of tone in the expression of prosodic grouping and its perception -- 7. Perception experiment 2: The role of the tonal manipulation of the accented syllable in the expression of prosodic grouping - goodness judgements -- 8. Perception experiment 3: The role of the tonal manipulation of the accented syllable in the expression of prosodic grouping - same vs. different -- 8. Summary -- References -- Trochaic proper government, loose CV, and vowel ~ zero alternation in Hungarian -- 1. Introduction* -- 2. Hungarian as strict CV -- 3. The behavior of long vowels in a strict CV analysis -- 4. Loose CV -- 5. Vowel ~ zero alternation -- 6. Vowel ~ zero alternation as syncope -- 7. Position of the alternation -- 8. Summary -- References -- Ablative causes in Hungarian -- 1. Introduction* -- 2. Cause PPs: The state of the art -- 2.1 The decausativization approach -- 2.2 The literature on the status of cause PPs -- 2.3 The non-agentivity restriction and the distribution of cause PPs: where we are now -- 3. The diversity of ablative causes -- 3.1 High ablative causes -- 3.2 Three types of ablative causes in Hungarian -- 4. The grammar of ablative causes -- 4.1 An overview -- 4.2 The lower part of the Hungarian clause: É. Kiss (2008) -- 4.3 The mapping proposal of Reinhart (2000, 2002) -- 4.4 Question 1: The grammatical status of low ablative causes -- 4.5 Question 2: A possible explanation for the non-agentivity restriction -- 5. Summary -- References -- Morphology or phonology? -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Distribution -- 3. Analysis -- 4. An alternative approach -- 5. Conclusion -- References.
Adpositional preverbs, chain reduction and phases* -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Adpositional preverb constructions in Hungarian -- 2.1 Preverbs in Hungarian -- 2.2 Two classes of adpositional preverbs -- 3. A direct dependency account -- 3.1 Adpositional preverbs and chain reduction -- 3.2 Chain reduction by phase -- 3.3 Options for focus: Chain reduction and phase extension -- 4. É. Kiss's (1998, 2002) indirect dependency analysis: A comparison -- 4.1 Indirect dependency by extraposition -- 4.2 Indirect dependency by apposition -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- Overt nominative subjects in infinitival complements in Hungarian* -- 1. Outline of the argument -- 2. What do these sentences mean? -- 3. "Our nominative DP" is located inside the infinitival clause -- 4. "Our nominative DP" is the subject of the infinitival clause -- 4.1 An argument from Binding Theory -- 4.2 A potential confound in cross-linguistic counterparts -- 4.3 Complemented pronouns -- 5. Long-distance agreement with a finite verb and multiple agreement -- 5.1 Subject agreement with a finite verb -- 5.2 Inflected infinitives -- 5.3 One finite verb, multiple overt subjects -- 6. De se pronouns and control -- 7. Conclusion -- References -- Name index -- Subject index.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910815989503321
Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : John Benjamins, c2009
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
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