Syntax over Time: Lexical, Morphological, and Information-Structural Interactions

Author:   Theresa Biberauer (Senior Research Associate, Senior Research Associate, University of Cambridge) ,  George Walkden (Lecturer in English Linguistics, Lecturer in English Linguistics, University of Manchester)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Volume:   15
ISBN:  

9780199687923


Pages:   440
Publication Date:   26 February 2015
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Syntax over Time: Lexical, Morphological, and Information-Structural Interactions


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Overview

This book provides a critical investigation of syntactic change and the factors that influence it. Converging empirical and theoretical considerations have suggested that apparent instances of syntactic change may be attributable to factors outside syntax proper, such as morphology or information structure. Some even go so far as to propose that there is no such thing as syntactic change, and that all such change in fact takes place in the lexicon or in the phonological component. In this volume, international scholars examine these proposals, drawing on detailed case studies from Germanic, Romance, Chinese, Egyptian, Finnic, Hungarian, and Sámi. They aim to answer such questions as: Can syntactic change arise without an external impetus? How can we tell whether a given change is caused by information-structural or morphological factors? What can 'microsyntactic' investigations of changes in individual lexical items tell us about the bigger picture? How universal are the clausal and nominal templates ('cartography'), and to what extent is syntactic structure more generally subject to universal constraints?The book will be of interest to all linguists working on syntactic variation and change, and especially those who believe that historical linguistics and linguistic theory can, and should, inform one another.

Full Product Details

Author:   Theresa Biberauer (Senior Research Associate, Senior Research Associate, University of Cambridge) ,  George Walkden (Lecturer in English Linguistics, Lecturer in English Linguistics, University of Manchester)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Volume:   15
Dimensions:   Width: 16.20cm , Height: 3.10cm , Length: 24.10cm
Weight:   0.814kg
ISBN:  

9780199687923


ISBN 10:   0199687927
Pages:   440
Publication Date:   26 February 2015
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

1: Theresa Biberauer and George Walkden: Introduction PART I: Syntax and the Lexicon 2: Caitlin Light: Expletive there in West Germanic 3: Joan Maling and Sigriðdur Sigurjónsdottir: From passive to active: Stages in the Icelandic New Impersonal 4: William Haddican, Eytan Zweig, and Daniel Ezra Johnson: Change in the syntax and semantics of be like quotatives 5: Veronika Hegedxus: The grammaticalization of postpositions in Old Hungarian 6: Katalin É. Kiss: A negative cycle in 12th - 15th century Hungarian 7: Ana Maria Martins: Negation and NPI composition inside DP PART II: Syntax and Morphology 8: Chris H. Reintges: Increasing morphological complexity and how syntax drives morphological change 9: Adam Ledgeway: Reconstructing complementizer-drop in the dialects of the Salento: A syntactic or phonological phenomenon 10: Marit Julien: On negation, tense, and participles in Finnic and Sámi 11: Krzysztof Migdalski: On the loss of tense and verb-adjacent clitics in Slavic 12: Dimitris Michelioudakis: The evolution of Inherent Case in the diachrony of Greek PART III: Syntax and Information Structure 13: Virginia Hill: From preposition to topic marker: Old Romanian pe 14: George Walkden: Verb-third in early West Germanic: A comparative perspective 15: Ed Cormany: Changes in Friulano subject clitics: Conflation and interactions with the left periphery 16: Lieven Danckaert: The decline of Latin left-peripheral presentation foci: Causes and consequences 17: Montserrat Batllori and Maria-Lluïsa Hernanz: Weak focus and polarity: Asymmetries between Spanish and Catalan 18: Roland Hinterhölzl: An interface account of word order variation in Old High German 19: Ann Taylor and Susan Pintzuk: Verb order, object position, and information status in Old English 20: Joel C. Wallenberg: Antisymmetry and heavy NP shift across Germanic 21: Edith Aldridge: Pronominal object shift in Archaic Chinese

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Author Information

Theresa Biberauer is a Senior Research Associate at the University of Cambridge, where she is also a Fellow of Churchill College, and Associate Professor Extraordinary at her South African alma mater, Stellenbosch University. Her research interests are principally in theoretical and comparative (synchronic and diachronic) morphosyntax, with Germanic generally and Afrikaans in particular being areas of specific interest. Her past work has focused on word-order variation, (null) subject phenomena, negation, information structure, and the larger question of the nature of parametric variation. She is the co-editor, with Michelle Sheehan, of Theoretical Approaches to Disharmonic Word Order (OUP 2013). George Walkden is a Lecturer in the Department of Linguistics and English Language at the University of Manchester. His research is in historical syntax, and his doctoral dissertation focused on aspects of syntactic reconstruction as applied to the early Germanic languages. He is the author of Syntactic Reconstruction and Proto-Germanic (OUP 2014), and is also Associate Editor of Language, with responsibility for its Historical Syntax section.

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