Product details:
ISBN13: | 9780198910329 |
ISBN10: | 01989103211 |
Binding: | Hardback |
No. of pages: | 384 pages |
Size: | 234x156 mm |
Language: | English |
700 |
Category:
Studies on Interrogative and Relative Syntax in French and Romance
Series:
Oxford Studies in Comparative Syntax;
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Date of Publication: 24 December 2024
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Short description:
This book provides a detailed study of the unusually large array of interrogative and relative grammars mastered by French speakers. Jean-Yves Pollock draws on the theoretical tools of generative grammar and compares the relevant French constructions with their counterparts in English, Italian, and Northern Italian dialects.
Long description:
This book provides a detailed study of the unusually large array of interrogative and relative grammars mastered by French speakers. Each of its eight chapters is devoted to one aspect of their interrogative competence and to the closely related syntax of their relative, exclamative, and cleft constructions. Jean-Yves Pollock draws on the rich traditional and generative literature devoted to this type of construction and makes use of all the theoretical tools of modern generative grammar, including the displacement known as remnant movement and the highly articulated high and low left peripheries of the clause developed within the cartographic approach. French speakers' competence in these complex areas often seems to set them apart from speakers of other Romance languages: this book hence adopts a comparative approach to isolate those features of French that are responsible for the unique properties exhibited by the constructions under investigation. A greater understanding of French questions, clefts, free relatives, and exclamatives is achieved through comparison with the equivalent constructions in English and Romance - more specifically Italian and Northern Italian dialects - and those French constructions equally shed light on the syntax of English, Italian, and Northern Italian dialects.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
Subject clitics, subject clitic inversion, and complex inversion: Generalizing remnant movement to the Comp area
A case study in comparative Romance interrogative syntax: Qu'est-ce que ^(qu)est-ce que?
Arguing for remnant movement in Romance
Remnant movement and smuggling in some Romance interrogative clauses
The syntax of French ^qu'est-ce que clauses and related constructions
French ^est-ce que yes/no questions and related constructions
Free relatives and related constructions in French
French que, quoi, ce que, and clefts
Subject clitics, subject clitic inversion, and complex inversion: Generalizing remnant movement to the Comp area
A case study in comparative Romance interrogative syntax: Qu'est-ce que ^(qu)est-ce que?
Arguing for remnant movement in Romance
Remnant movement and smuggling in some Romance interrogative clauses
The syntax of French ^qu'est-ce que clauses and related constructions
French ^est-ce que yes/no questions and related constructions
Free relatives and related constructions in French
French que, quoi, ce que, and clefts