The Cambridge Handbook of Comparative Syntax - Barbiers, Sjef; Corver, Norbert; Polinsky, Maria; (ed.) - Prospero Internet Bookshop

 
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ISBN13:9781009179386
ISBN10:1009179381
Binding:Hardback
No. of pages:800 pages
Language:English
700
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The Cambridge Handbook of Comparative Syntax

 
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
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Short description:

Bringing together a global team of scholars, this book provides a full overview of the state-of-the-art in comparative formal syntax.

Long description:
Bringing together a globally representative team of scholars, this Handbook provides a comprehensive overview of comparative syntax, the study of universal and variable properties of the structure of building blocks in natural language. Divided into four thematic parts, it covers the various theoretical and methodological approaches to syntactic variation; explores dependency relations and dependency marking; shows how the building blocks of syntax both vary and display universal properties across languages, and explores the interfaces between syntax and other aspects of language structure. It also includes examples from a typologically broad range of languages, as well as data from child language, sign language, language processing, and diachronic syntax, giving a clear picture of the ubiquity of cross-linguistic variation. It serves as a source of inspiration for future research, and forges a deeper understanding of the variant and invariant parts of language, making it essential reading for researchers and students in linguistics.
Table of Contents:
1. The comparative syntactic enterprise: an introduction Sjef Barbiers, Norbert Corver and Maria Polinsky; Part I. Comparative Syntax: Theory, Methodology and Data Collection: 2. Theoretical approaches to comparative syntax Sjef Barbiers, Guido Vanden Wyngaerd and Jenneke van der Wal; 3. Databases for comparative syntactic research Balthasar Bickel and Jessica K. Ivani; 4. Quantitative approaches to syntactic variation Jeroen van Craenenbroeck and Marjo van Koppen; 5. Computational approaches to syntactic variation Tim Hunter and Robert Frank; 6. Comparative syntax from formal and functional perspectives Polina Pleshak and Maria Polinsky; 7. Micro-comparative syntax, dialectology, and sociolinguistics Sjef Barbiers; 8. Change: Comparative syntax and diachrony Adam Ledgeway; 9. Universal and language-specific properties of language: a view from language acquisition Maria Teresa Guasti and Elena Pagliarini; Part II. Comparative Syntax: Building Blocks and Combinatorial Properties: 10. Words and features Paula Fenger and Maria Kouneli; 11. Pronouns: Structure, binding, and classification Elizabeth Ritter and Martina Wiltschko; 12. Functional architecture of nominal phrases Artemis Alexiadou; 13. Functional architecture of adjectival phrases Norbert Corver; 14. Functional architecture of prepositional phrases Marcel den Dikken and &&&201;va D&&&233;k&&&225;ny; 15. Analyzing tenselessness Hamida Demirdache and Hongyuan Sun; 16. Voice Jim Wood and Matthew Tyler; 17. Coordination Jan-Wouter Zwart; 18. Clause types Raffaella Zanuttini, Paul Portner and Miok Pak; Part III. Comparative Syntax: Dependency Relations and Dependency Marking: 19. Agreement and concord Emily Clem and Mark Norris; 20. Head dependencies Ian Roberts; 21. A-dependencies Suzanna Fong and Claire Halpert; 22. Anaphoric dependencies Martin Everaert and Eric Reuland; 23. The comparative syntax of nominal quantifier Peter Jenks; 24. &&&256;-dependencies and successive cyclic movement Lisa Lai-Shen Cheng; 25. From interrogatives to relatives: a comprehensive account of wh-constructions Radek Simik; Part IV. Comparative Syntax: Interfaces: 26. Syntax semantics Klaus Abels and Veneeta Dayal; 27. Comparative syntax, morphology, and 'externalization' (What happens at PF?) David Embick; 28. Syntax and externalization: Linearization Ad Neeleman; 29. Cross-modal comparative syntax Roland Pfau and Josep Quer; 30. Syntax and information structure Fatima Hamlaoui and Kriszta Szendroi; 31. Syntactic dependency formation in sentence processing: a comparative perspective Brian Dillon and Maayan Keshev.