Diachronic SyntaxOUP Oxford, 2007. jan. 4. - 508 oldal This is an introduction to syntactic change from the perspective of generative theory. Generative diachronic syntax has developed since the inception of the principles and parameters approach to comparative syntax in the early 1980s and have become increasingly important in historical linguistics and generative theory: it acts as a bridge between them and has provided insights to both. The generative approach was developed to account for synchronic variation: Ian Roberts shows how it may be used to understand how and why languages change. He relates work in historical linguistics to contemporary work on universal grammar and historical syntactic variation. He explains how standard questions in historical linguistics - including word-order change, grammaticalisation, and reanalysis - can be helpfully explored in terms of current generative syntax. He examinbes the nature of the links between syntactic change and first-language acquisition and language learnability and concludes by considering the short and long-term effects of language contact. Professor Roberts illustrates his exposition with numerous examples from a range of different languages and provides guides to further reading and a comprehensive glossary. |
Tartalomjegyzék
Further reading | 8 |
the development of French nwords | 77 |
Types of syntactic change | 121 |
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abductive acquirers analysis approach argues auxiliary c-commands Chapter Chomsky clausal clitics complement construction creoles Danelaw dative diachronic dialects diglossia direct object discussion English EPP feature example fact finite French German grammar grammatical systems Guasti idea illustrated inflection Italian Kroch language acquisition language change language faculty Latin lexical lexical diffusion Lightfoot linguistic main clauses marked markedness merged modals morphological nature negation negative concord non-finite verb notion null subjects null-subject languages null-subject parameter observed option OV languages OV order overt P-ambiguity parameter change parameter values phonological pidgin Pintzuk position possible postulation prepositions Principle pronouns properties proposed question reanalysis relevant Roberts and Roussou Romance Romance languages root infinitives SpecTP structure syntactic change syntax thematic roles theory trigger typological uninterpretable Universal Grammar unmarked V-to-T movement V-to-T parameter variation verb Vulgar Latin wh-movement word order word-order change

