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Syntactic Argumentation and the Structure of English
edited-book
Author(s):
David M. Perlmutter
,
Scott Soames
Publication date
(Online):
September 14 2020
Publisher:
University of California Press
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There is no author summary for this book yet. Authors can add summaries to their books on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
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Jewish Historical Studies: A Journal of English-Speaking Jewry
Author and book information
Book
ISBN (Electronic):
9780520341586
Publication date (Print):
December 31 1979
Publication date (Online):
September 14 2020
DOI:
10.1525/9780520341586
SO-VID:
03f897a8-2304-4131-9a87-a29290015185
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Book chapters
pp. I
Frontmatter
pp. IX
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
pp. V
Contents
pp. XI
Introduction
pp. 3
1. Setting the Stage
pp. 8
2. Reflexive and Nonreflexive Pronouns — 1
pp. 11
3. Reflexive and Nonreflexive Pronouns — 2
pp. 15
4. Imperatives
pp. 22
5. Imperatives: Further Conclusions
pp. 24
6. Arguments and Conclusions
pp. 26
7. Phrase Structure Rules
pp. 30
8. Actives and Passives
pp. 35
9. Grounds for Choice between Alternative Grammars
pp. 37
10. Activization vs. Passivization
pp. 40
11. Formulating the Passive Rule: A First Approximation
pp. 42
12. THERE-1
pp. 46
13. THERE-2
pp. 53
14. Notes on the Formalism of Transformational Grammar
pp. 61
15. Recursion
pp. 65
16. Extraposition
pp. 71
17. The Derived Constituent Structure Produced by Passive
pp. 72
18. Two New Constructions
pp. 74
19. Part 1: Its Place in a Wider Context
pp. 79
20. Subject-to-Object Raising vs. S-Erasure
pp. 84
21. The Triggering of Rules by Verbs
pp. 87
22. Missing Subjects
pp. 92
23. Coreference and Identity
pp. 95
24. LIKELY: Equi vs. Subject-to-Subject Raising
pp. 100
25. The Rationale for Multiple Arguments in Linguistics
pp. 102
26. EAGER: Equi vs. Subject-to-Subject Raising
pp. 106
27. LIKELY, EAGER, and Sentence Idioms
pp. 110
28. Some Differences Among Verbals
pp. 114
29. Part 2: Its Place in a Wider Context
pp. 119
30. Rule Ordering
pp. 126
31. The Cyclical Theory in Early Transformational Grammar
pp. 131
32. The Conceptual Independence of Rule Ordering and the Cycle
pp. 132
33. Characterizing the Notion “Obligatory Rule”
pp. 137
34. Evidence for the Cycle in a Theory with the Frustrated Characterization of Obligatory Rules —
pp. 138
35. Evidence for the Cycle in a Theory with the Frustrated Characterization of Obligatory Rules — 2
pp. 140
36. Evidence for the Cycle in a Theory with the Frustrated Characterization of Obligatory Rules — 3
pp. 141
37. Summary of Evidence for the Cycle in a Theory with the Frustrated Characterization of Obligatory Rules
pp. 142
38. Evidence for the Cycle in a Theory with the Immediate Characterization of Obligatory Rules
pp. 144
39. Strict Cyclicity
pp. 146
40. Summary of Evidence for the Cycle
pp. 148
41. The Cyclical Theory vs. Multicyclical Theories
pp. 151
42. What Is Linguistic Theory?
pp. 154
43. The Cycle and Strict Cyclicity as Linguistic Universals: Evidence from Modern Greek
pp. 172
44. Part 3: Its Place in a Wider
pp. 179
45. Cycle-Types
pp. 181
46. Equi and THERE-Insertion
pp. 182
47. Reflexivization and Imperative Deletion
pp. 185
48. What Cycle-Type is Extraposition?¹
pp. 186
49. Cycle Arguments and Cycle-Types¹
pp. 188
50. Part 4: Its Place in a Wider Context
pp. 195
51. FORCE and EXPECT
pp. 200
52. A Checklist of Verbs
pp. 202
53. Two Analyses of the Passive
pp. 204
54. Raising/Passive Sentences
pp. 211
55. THERE-Insertion and Verb Agreement
pp. 214
56. Primacy Relations¹
pp. 219
57. Super Equi-NP Deletion¹
pp. 225
58. Part 5: Its Place in a Wider Context
pp. 227
59. Topicalization
pp. 238
60. Types of Arguments for Movement Rules
pp. 240
61. Nonsubject Deletion vs. Nonsubject Raising (Argument and Problem)
pp. 246
62. What Cycle-Type Is Nonsubject Raising? (Problem)
pp. 247
63. Nonsubject Raising and FOR-Phrases (Problem)
pp. 251
64. Questions
pp. 259
65. Two Hypotheses about Question Movement (Problem)
pp. 261
66. Relativization
pp. 272
67. Part 6: Its Place in a Wider Context
pp. 275
68. Island Constraints
pp. 281
69. Which Rules Obey Island Constraints?
pp. 293
70. Picture Nouns and Krispy Klauses
pp. 296
71. Rightward Movement Rules and the Right Roof Constraint
pp. 312
72. Islands, Command, and Maximal Strips
pp. 317
73. Part 7: Its Place in a Wider Context
pp. 321
74. Pronominalization
pp. 337
75. A Pronominalization Problem (Problem)
pp. 339
76. Dative Movement and Pronominalization (Problem)
pp. 341
77. Particle Movement and Pronominalization (Problem)
pp. 343
78. Particle Movement, Dative Movement, and Pronouns
pp. 348
79. Pronominalization and THERE-Insertion (Problem)
pp. 350
80. Question Movement and Pronominalization (Problem)
pp. 352
81. Problems with Pronominalization
pp. 361
82. Paradox Lost
pp. 376
83. New Perspectives on Meaning, Coreference, and Pronominal Anaphora
pp. 401
84. Part 8: Its Place in a Wider Context
pp. 405
Discussions of Problems
pp. 531
Some Further Issues
pp. 591
Bibliography
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