統語的素性と統語的変化の限界<br>Syntactic Features and the Limits of Syntactic Change (Oxford Studies in Diachronic and Historical Linguistics)

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統語的素性と統語的変化の限界
Syntactic Features and the Limits of Syntactic Change (Oxford Studies in Diachronic and Historical Linguistics)

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 448 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780198832584
  • DDC分類 415

Full Description

This volume brings together the latest diachronic research on syntactic features and their role in restricting syntactic change. The chapters address a central theoretical issue in diachronic syntax: whether syntactic variation can always be attributed to differences in the features of items in the lexicon, as the Borer-Chomsky conjecture proposes. In answering this question, all the chapters develop analyses of syntactic change couched within a formalist framework in which rich hierarchical structures and abstract features of various kinds play an important role. The first three parts of the volume explore the different domains of the clause, namely the C-domain, the T-domain and the ?P/VP-domain respectively, while chapters in the final part are concerned with establishing methodology in diachronic syntax and modelling linguistic correspondences. The contributors draw on extensive data from a large number of languages and dialects, including several that have received little attention in the literature on diachronic syntax, such as Romeyka, a Greek variety spoken in Turkey, and Middle Low German, previously spoken in northern Germany. Other languages are explored from a fresh theoretical perspective, including Hungarian, Icelandic, and Austronesian languages. The volume sheds light not only on specific syntactic changes from a cross-linguistic perspective but also on broader issues in language change and linguistic theory.

Contents

1: Jóhannes Gísli Jonsson and Thórhallur Eythórsson: Introduction: Syntactic features and the limits of syntactic change
Part I: The Left Periphery
2: Julia Bacskai-Atkari: Degree semantics, polarity, and the grammaticalization of comparative operators into complementizers
3: Julia Bacskai-Atkari and Éva Dékany: Cyclic change in Hungarian relative clauses
4: Gabriela Alboiu and Virginia Hill: Diachronic change and feature instability: The cycles of Fin in Romanian obligatory control
5: Melissa Farasyn and Anne Breitbarth: Null subjects in Middle Low German: Diachronic stability and change
Part II: The T-domain
6: Chiara Gianollo: Feature reanalysis and the Latin origin of Romance Negative Concord
7: Hakyung Jung and Krzysztof Migdalski: Degrammaticalization of pronominal clitics in Slavic
8: Ioanna Sitaridou: (In)vulnerable inflected infinitives as complements to modals: Evidence from Galician and Romeyka
9: Lieven Danckaert: Assessing phonological correlates of syntactic change: The case of Late Latin weak BE
10: Elizabeth Cowper, Daniel Currie Hall, Bronwyn M. Bjorkman, Rebecca Tollan, and Neij Banerjee: Investigating the past of the futurate present
Part III: Case marking
11: Elena Anagnostopoulou and Christina Sevdali: From lexical to dependent: The case of the Greek dative
12: Edith Aldridge: The nature and origin of syntactic ergativity in Austronesian languages
13: Iris Edda Nowenstein and Anton Karl Ingason: Featural dynamics in morphosyntactic change
Part IV: Syntactic reconstruction
14: Katalin É. Kiss: Syntactic reconstruction based on linguistic fossils: Object-marking in Uralic
15: Mark Hale and Madelyn Kissock: Regular syntactic change and syntactic reconstruction

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