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Table of Contents
- POINTS OF CONVERGENCE IN ROMANCE LINGUISTICS
- Editorial page
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Table of contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1. The organization of the volume
- Section A. Interfaces
- Chapter 1. Picard subject clitics: An analysis at the interface of syntax, phonology, and prosody
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Subject clitics: Syntactic subjects or agreement markers?
- 3. Lexical subjects: Syntactic subjects or dislocated phrases?
- 3.1 Vowel epenthesis in Picard
- 3.2 Subjects and epenthesis
- 4. Subject clitics: Affixes or clitics?
- 4.1 Phonological phrase and clitic group
- 4.2 Phonological word and clitic group
- 5. Discussion and conclusion
- References
- Data sources
- Chapter 2. A child’s view of Romance modification
- 1. Introduction
- 2. UG then and now: How generative approaches neglected grammatical learning
- 3. Recursion as a learning problem
- 4. Acquiring recursive NP modification in Spanish
- 4.1 Recursion in child language
- 4.2 NP internal modifiers in Spanish
- 4.3 The complexity and recursion project
- 4.4 The Colombia study
- 4.5 The bilingual study
- 5. Discussion
- Acknowledgements
- Funding
- References
- Chapter 3. Definite determiners in Romance: The role of modification
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Existing literature
- 3. Theoretical background
- 3.1 Features
- 3.2 Prepositions
- 3.3 Nominal phases and their peripheries
- 3.4 The number phrase
- 3.5 Adjectives
- 4. Proposal
- 4.1 M-merge
- 4.2 Spell-out
- 5. Implementation of the analysis
- 5.1 Num heads and the expression of definiteness
- 5.2 Romanian
- 5.3 Megleno-Romanian and Istro-Romanian
- 5.4 Northern Aromanian (NAr)
- 5.5 Southern Aromanian (SAr)
- 5.6 To sum up
- 6. Conclusions
- References
- Section B. Bridging issues at the CP-TP-vP levels
- Chapter 4. Differential object marking, oblique morphology, and enriched case hierarchies
- Introduction
- 1. Differential objects as syntactic obliques
- 2. Oblique morphology as morphological syncretism
- 3. Oblique dom in enriched case hierarchies
- 3.1 Nominal structure in enriched case hierarchies
- 4. Conclusions
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- References
- Chapter 5. A deletion account of referential null objects in Basque Spanish
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The distribution of referential null objects in B-Spanish
- 2.1 The relevance of case
- 3. Analysis
- 3.1 The nature of accusative vs. dative clitics
- 3.2 A deletion analysis of null objects
- 4. Final remarks
- References
- Chapter 6. Same EPP, different null subject type
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1 Background on the EPP
- 1.2 Background on NSLs
- 2. Different NSL type, same EPP
- 2.1 Consistent vs partial NSL types
- 2.2 EPP type
- 3. Synchronic and diachronic variation
- 3.1 Diachronic variation
- 3.2 Synchronic variation
- 4. Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- References
- 1. Introduction
- Chapter 7. On (un)grammatical sequences of ses in Spanish
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Martins & Nunes (2017)
- 2.1 Matrix-embedded asymmetries
- 3. Clitic climbing
- 4. An alternative proposal and an extension
- 5. A brief recap
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Chapter 8. On the interpretation of the Spanish 1st person plural pronoun
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Background and data
- 2.1 The use of Spanish subject pronouns and their IS
- 2.2 The pronominal interpretation of discourse participants
- 2.3 The expression of clusivity
- 3. Information structure does not determine clusivity
- 3.1 Topics
- 3.2 Foci
- 3.3 Summary
- 4. Speech act projection and the speaker/addressee relation
- 4.1 A logophoric center and a speech act phrase
- 4.2 Further evidence for SAP
- 4.3 Consequences in informatively unmarked contexts
- 5. Conclusions
- Gloss key
- References
- Section C. Bridging issues at the PP-DP levels
- Chapter 9. French ne … que exceptives in prepositional contexts
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Prepositional exceptives
- 3. Covert rien and negative concord in prepositional contexts
- 4. Concluding remarks
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Chapter 10. Interpreting reduplicated numerals in Old Ibero-Romance: A syntactic account
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1 Background
- 1.2 Data and sources
- 2. Syntactic environments
- 3. Accounting for Old Ibero-Romance DDNR
- 3.1 Ditransitive constructions
- 3.2 Extending the analysis
- 3.3 A unified analysis
- 4. A distributive analysis
- 4.1 Accounting for Old Ibero-Romance RedNum
- 5. Conclusion
- References
- 1. Introduction
- Chapter 11. Value and cardinality in the evaluation of bare singulars in Brazilian Portuguese
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Dimensions of comparison beyond cardinality
- 3. Studies
- 3.1 Study 1: Truth value judgment task
- 3.2 Study 2: Priming task
- 3.3 Control items
- 4. Conclusions
- References
- Chapter 12. Formality by distance in Spanish and Catalan
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Second-person pronouns in Spanish and Catalan
- 3. On person and number
- 4. Spatial deixis, vicinities and pronouns
- 5. The proposal
- 6. Morphology
- 6.1 A sampling of formality in Spanish and Catalan
- 7. Conclusion
- References
- Section D. Bridging issues in linguistics
- Chapter 13. Cyclical change in affixal negation
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Latin vs. Romance iN-
- 3. A nanosyntactic approach to the syntax-lexicon interface
- 4. Proposal
- 4.1 Nanosyntax of Romance iN-
- 4.2 Nanosyntax of Latin iN-
- 4.3 From Latin to Romance iN-
- 5. Concluding remarks
- Acknowledgements
- Funding
- References
- Chapter 14. Code-mixing and semantico-pragmatic resources in francophone Maine: Meanings-in-use of yeah/yes and ouais/oui
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Approach and key terms
- 2.1 Code and code-mixing
- 2.2 Meaning-in-use
- 3. Corpus and context
- 3.1 The corpus
- 3.2 The context: Franco-Americans of Maine
- 4. Data and coding
- 4.1 Identifying and selecting occurrences of code-mixing
- 4.2 Coding of the selected occurrences: Categories of meaning-in-use for yeah and yes
- 5. Results and interpretation
- 6. Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- Funding
- References
- Chapter 15. Exceptionality and ungrammaticality in Spanish stress: A stratal OT approach
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Data
- 3. Current proposal
- 3.1 Stratal OT
- 3.2 Accounting for the Regular pattern
- 3.3 Exceptional stress
- 4. Exceptionality distinguished from ungramaticality
- 4.1 Truncations
- 5. Remaining words
- 6. General discussion and conclusions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Index
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