Description
There are far more syntactically distinct languages than we might have thought; yet there are far fewer than there might have been. Questions of Syntax collects sixteen papers authored by Richard S. Kayne, a preeminent theoretical syntactician, who has sought over the course of his career to understand why both these facts are true.With a particular emphasis on comparative syntax, these chapters collectively consider how wide a range of questions the field of syntax can reasonably attempt to ask and then answer. At issue, among other topics, are the relation between syntax and (certain aspects of) semantics, the relation between syntax and what appear to be lexical questions, the relation between syntax and morphology, the relation between syntax and certain aspects of phonology (insofar as silent elements and their properties play a substantial role), and the extent to which comparative syntax can provide new and decisive evidence bearing on these different kinds of questions. To Kayne, comparative syntax can shed light on what may initially seem lexical questions, and antisymmetry on the evolution of human language itself.Taken as a whole, these essays elucidate the theoretical contributions of one the most influential scholars in linguistics.
Table of Contents
PrefaceAcknowledgementsSection A. Comparative SyntaxChapter 1 More Languages Than We Might Have Thought. Fewer Languages Than There Might Have BeenChapter 2 Comparative SyntaxChapter 3 Comparative Syntax and English Is ToChapter 4 Having Need and Needing Have (with Stephanie Harves)Section B. Silent ElementsChapter 5 The Silence of HeadsChapter 6 A Note on Some Even More Unusual Relative ClausesChapter 7 The Unicity of There and the Definiteness EffectChapter 8 Notes on French and English Demonstratives (with Jean-Yves Pollock)Chapter 9 Some Thoughts on One and Two and Other NumeralsChapter 10 English One and Ones as Complex DeterminersChapter 11 Once and TwiceChapter 12 A Note on Grand and its Silent EntourageSection C. Ordering and DoublingChapter 13 Why Are There No Directionality Parameters?Chapter 14 Toward a Syntactic Reinterpretation of Harris and Halle (2005)Chapter 15 Locality and Agreement in French Hyper-Complex Inversion (with Jean-Yves Pollock)Chapter 16 Clitic Doubling and Agreement in French Hyper-Complex InversionBibliographyIndex



