Boundaries Crossed, at the Interfaces of Morphosyntax, Phonology, Pragmatics and Semantics
This volume offers a selection of interface studies in generative linguistics, a valuable "one-stop shopping" opportunity for readers interested in the ways in which the various modules of linguistic analysis intersect and interact. The boundaries between the lexicon and morphophonology, b...
Corporate Author: | |
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Other Authors: | , , , |
Format: | Electronic eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Cham :
Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer,
2018.
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Edition: | 1st ed. 2018. |
Series: | Studies in Natural Language and Linguistic Theory,
94 |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Full Text via HEAL-Link |
Table of Contents:
- Marcel den Dikken: Introduction
- Part I: The lexicon and morphophonology
- Zoltán Bánréti: Lexical recursion in aphasia: Case studies
- Ferenc Kiefer & Boglárka Németh: Aspectual constraints on noun incorporation in Hungarian
- Károly Bibok: Instrument-subject alternation from a lexical-pragmatic perspective
- Marianne Bakró-Nagy: Mansi loanword phonology: A historical approach to the typology of repair strategies of Russian loanwords in Mansi
- Robert Vago: The epistemic/deontic suffix -hat/het in Hungarian: Derivational or inflectional?
- Part II: Morphology and syntax
- Katalin É. Kiss: Possessive agreement turned into a derivational suffix
- Veronika Hegedűs: The rise of the modifier suffix -i with PPs
- Henk van Riemsdijk: Hybrid categories and the CIT
- Marta Ruda: Local operations deriving long-distance relations: Object agreement in Hungarian and the genitive of negation in Polish
- Marcel den Dikken: An integrated perspective on Hungarian nominal and verbal inflection
- Christina Tortora: Evidence for generalized verbal periphrasis in English
- Part III: Morphosyntax and meaning
- Julia Bacskai-Atkari: Marking finiteness and low peripheries
- Beáta Gyuris: Ugye in Hungarian: Towards a unified analysis
- László Kálmán: Neo-Lockean semantics
- Anna Szabolcsi: Strict and non-strict negative concord in Hungarian: A unified analysis
- Balázs Surányi: Focus in focus
- Gábor Alberti & Judit Farkas: The relationship in Hungarian of animacy features to information-structural functions, degrees of referentiality and number
- Krisztina Szécsényi: Control and the left periphery: The scope and information structure properties of Hungarian infinitival clauses with nominative, dative and covert subjects
- Part IV: Morphosyntax and phonology
- Jaklin Kornfilt: Sounds are not equal, nor is all silence
- Michael Brody: Two advantages of precedence syntax
- Anikó Lipták: Dissecting adpositional particle constructions: Remarks from ellipsis
- Tim Mckinnon, Gabriella Hermon, Yanti & Peter Cole: From phonology to syntax: Insights from Jangkat Malay
- Judit Gervain: Gateway to language: The perception of prosody at birth
- Irene Vogel: The morpho-syntax-phonology interface in complex compounds.