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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Robert A. Chametzky (University of Iowa)Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd Imprint: Wiley-Blackwell Dimensions: Width: 17.30cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 24.60cm Weight: 0.354kg ISBN: 9780631201595ISBN 10: 0631201599 Pages: 192 Publication Date: 16 September 2000 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of Contents"Preface. Acknowledgments. Introduction. Our Topic. Introduction. Crucial Concepts/Themes. The Alternatives. Conclusion/Evaluation. Phrase Structure, the Past. PS rules and grammars. If not Phrase Structure, what?. Dependency Theory. Categorial Grammar. X-Bar Theory. And so what?. Part I: Phrase Structure in Principles & Parameters Syntax. 1. The Issues. 2. Structuralization and argument alignment. 3. Subjects in PS. 4. Adjunct(ion)s. 5. Heads in PS. 6. Functional vs. Lexical Categories. 7. Chomsky (1986a) and the 'generalization' hypothesis. 8. Fukui & Speas (1986), Fukui (1995), & Speas (1990): Functional Heads. 9. Abney (1987): Functional Elements. 10. Grimshaw (1991): From Extended Projection to a theoretical impasse. 11. Lebeaux (1988): Closed Class Items and a theoretical opening. 12. X-Bar Theory. 13. Rules. 14. Binary Branching. 15. How to order a phrase marker. Part II: The School of Athens. 16. The Work. 17. TPM's Two Part Harmony. 18. PM Theory. 19. C-command. 20. Extending the Base. 21. Islands: PS of No Return. 22. Syntactic Structure & Argument Structure. 23. Structuralization & Argument Alignment. 24. Subjects. 25. Adjunct(ion)s. 26. Heads & Exocentricity. 27. Heads. 28. Exocentricity: the Gerund. 29. Functional Categories. 30. X-Bar Theory. 31. PS Rules. 32. Branching. 33. PM Ordering. Part III: View of Toledo. 34. The Chapter. 35. The Work. 36. The LCA. 37. X-Bar Derived. 38. Specifiers & Adjunction. 39. Subsequence, precedence, word order. 40. Theoretical Considerations. 41. Substantive Considerations. 42. Et Seq. 43. And, again. 44. Syntactic Structure & Argument Structure. 45. Structuralization & Argument Alignment. 46. Subjects. 47. Adjunct(ion)s. 48. Heads. 49. Functional Categories. 50. X-Bar Theory. 51. Derive & Concur. 52. Branching. 53. PM Ordering. Part IV: Less is More. 54. The Work. 55. The Computational Component. 56. Against Move. 57. The Numeration. 58. PS in TMP. 59. Minimal Mechanics. 60. Spanners in the Works. 61. Merge. 62. Select. 63. Merge, again. 64. Labels and Terms. 65. Merge, one more time. 66. Conclusions. 67. Syntactic Structure & Argument Structure. 68. Structuralization: Theta-relatedness. 69. Structuralization: Argument Alignment. 70. Subjects. 71. Adjunct(ion)s. 72. Adjuncts. 73. Adjunctions. 74. Heads. 75. Functional Categories. 76. Functional Categories & Movement. 77. Functional Categories: Fact or Fiction. 78. ""Additional Elements."". 79. Branching. 80. PM Ordering. Part V: Conclusion. Beginning of the End. ""Derive,"" he said. The Derivationalist's Case. A Representationalist Alternative. Now you tell us?. REALLY Minimalist phrase structure. . . . made to be broken. References. Index."Reviews"Chametzky has written a lucid and penetrating overview of recent theories of phrase structure, which addresses issues that are both fundamental and daunting. He carefully separates recent proposals into their component parts, revealing how various theories differ, what properties they share, and where they fail to live up to their minimalist claims." Peggy Speas, University of Massachusetts, Amherst "This book could have been called 'Every Question you ever had about Phrase Structure and were Afraid to Ask'. Both thought-provoking and provocative, it will interest any serious student of the GB tradition and how it shaped the emerging Minimalist Program." Juan Uriagereka, University of Maryland, College Park Chametzky has written a lucid and penetrating overview of recent theories of phrase structure, which addresses issues that are both fundamental and daunting. He carefully separates recent proposals into their component parts, revealing how various theories differ, what properties they share, and where they fail to live up to their minimalist claims. Peggy Speas, University of Massachusetts, Amherst This book could have been called 'Every Question you ever had about Phrase Structure and were Afraid to Ask'. Both thought-provoking and provocative, it will interest any serious student of the GB tradition and how it shaped the emerging Minimalist Program. Juan Uriagereka, University of Maryland, College Park ""Chametzky has written a lucid and penetrating overview of recent theories of phrase structure, which addresses issues that are both fundamental and daunting. He carefully separates recent proposals into their component parts, revealing how various theories differ, what properties they share, and where they fail to live up to their minimalist claims."" Peggy Speas, University of Massachusetts, Amherst ""This book could have been called 'Every Question you ever had about Phrase Structure and were Afraid to Ask'. Both thought-provoking and provocative, it will interest any serious student of the GB tradition and how it shaped the emerging Minimalist Program."" Juan Uriagereka, University of Maryland, College Park Author InformationRobert A. Chametzky is Assistant Dean in the College of Arts & Sciences at Cornell University. He is author of A Theory of Phrase Markers and the Extended Base (1996). 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