Continuity and Variation in Germanic and Romance
Herausgeber: Wolfe, Sam; Meklenborg, Christine
Continuity and Variation in Germanic and Romance
Herausgeber: Wolfe, Sam; Meklenborg, Christine
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This volume offers a range of synchronic and diachronic case studies in comparative Germanic and Romance morphosyntax. The contributors adopt a diverse range of approaches, making use of the latest digitized corpora and presenting a mixture of well-known and under-studied data from standard and non-standard Germanic and Romance languages.
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This volume offers a range of synchronic and diachronic case studies in comparative Germanic and Romance morphosyntax. The contributors adopt a diverse range of approaches, making use of the latest digitized corpora and presenting a mixture of well-known and under-studied data from standard and non-standard Germanic and Romance languages.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Seitenzahl: 624
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. Juli 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 239mm x 163mm x 43mm
- Gewicht: 1111g
- ISBN-13: 9780198841166
- ISBN-10: 0198841167
- Artikelnr.: 60747182
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Seitenzahl: 624
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. Juli 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 239mm x 163mm x 43mm
- Gewicht: 1111g
- ISBN-13: 9780198841166
- ISBN-10: 0198841167
- Artikelnr.: 60747182
Sam Wolfe is Associate Professor of French Linguistics at the University of Oxford and Tutor and Official Fellow of St Catherine's College, having previously held teaching positions at the universities of Cambridge and Manchester. The principal focus of his current research is a monograph on syntactic change in French, and he has ongoing projects on Venetian and on contact-induced changes in Romance languages. His first book, Verb Second in Medieval Romance, was published by OUP in 2019, and he is the co-editor of the OUP volumes Rethinking Verb Second (with Rebecca Woods; 2020) and Variation and Change in Gallo-Romance Grammar (with Martin Maiden; 2020). Christine Meklenborg is Professor of French Linguistics at the University of Oslo, Norway. She specializes in Medieval French but in recent years has also been working on medieval Germanic languages, especially Old Swedish. From 2014 to 2019 she was Principal Investigator of the research project 'Traces of History'. She is the editor of A Micro-Perspective on Verb Second in Romance and Germanic (special edition of Linguistic Variation; Benjamins 2019) and, co-editor of Challenging Clitics (with Hans Petter Helland; Benjamins 2013).
* List of abbreviations
* The contributors
* 1: Sam Wolfe and Christine Meklenborg: Germanic and Romance: Data,
method, and theory
* Part I: The Subject System and the Inflectional Layer
* 2: Liliane Haegeman and Elisabeth Stark: Register-specific subject
omission in English and French and the syntax of coordination
* 3: Anna Cardinaletti: The position of subjects in Germanic and
Romance questions
* 4: Jan Casalicchio: Expressing perception in parallel ways:
Sentential Small Clauses in German and Romance
* 5: Federica Cognola and George Walkden: Pro-drop in interrogatives
across older Germanic and Romance languages
* 6: Matthew L. Maddox and Jonathan E. MacDonald: Reflexive
constructions in German, Spanish, and French as a product of cyclic
interaction
* 7: Benjamin L. Sluckin, Silvio Cruschina, and Fabienne Martin:
Locative inversion in Germanic and Romance: A conspiracy theory
* Part II: Inversion, Discourse Pragmatics, and the Left Periphery
* 8: Roland Hinterhölzl: V2 and topicalization in Germanic and Romance
* 9: Christine Meklenborg, Hans Peter Helland, and Terje Lohndal:
Topics in French and Norwegian
* 10: Ans van Kemenade and Christine Meklenborg: Issues in the left
periphery of Old French and Old English: Topic types and the V2
constraint
* 11: Sam Wolfe: Evaluating the contact hypothesis for Old French word
order
* 12: Ian Roberts: Second positions: A synchronic analysis and some
diachronic consequences
* 13: Kristin Føsker Hagemann and Signe Laake: Deconstructing stylistic
fronting in Old Norwegian and Old Spanish
* 14: Verner Egerland: The grammaticalization of sic: On narrative
particles in Romance and Scandinavian
* 15: Cecilia Poletto and Emanuela Sanfelici: Against complementizers
* 16: Richard S. Kayne: On complementizers and relative pronouns in
Germanic vs Romance
* Part III: Continuity and Variation beyond the Clause
* 17: Giuliana Giusti: Adjectival concord in Romance and Germanic
* 18: Jacopo Garzonio and Silvia Rossi: Functional and lexical
prepositions across Germanic and Romance
* 19: Kersti Börjars, Nigel Vincent, and Sam Wolfe: Locative
prepositions in the house
* 20: John Charles Smith: 'Have' in English and Romance
* References
* Index
* The contributors
* 1: Sam Wolfe and Christine Meklenborg: Germanic and Romance: Data,
method, and theory
* Part I: The Subject System and the Inflectional Layer
* 2: Liliane Haegeman and Elisabeth Stark: Register-specific subject
omission in English and French and the syntax of coordination
* 3: Anna Cardinaletti: The position of subjects in Germanic and
Romance questions
* 4: Jan Casalicchio: Expressing perception in parallel ways:
Sentential Small Clauses in German and Romance
* 5: Federica Cognola and George Walkden: Pro-drop in interrogatives
across older Germanic and Romance languages
* 6: Matthew L. Maddox and Jonathan E. MacDonald: Reflexive
constructions in German, Spanish, and French as a product of cyclic
interaction
* 7: Benjamin L. Sluckin, Silvio Cruschina, and Fabienne Martin:
Locative inversion in Germanic and Romance: A conspiracy theory
* Part II: Inversion, Discourse Pragmatics, and the Left Periphery
* 8: Roland Hinterhölzl: V2 and topicalization in Germanic and Romance
* 9: Christine Meklenborg, Hans Peter Helland, and Terje Lohndal:
Topics in French and Norwegian
* 10: Ans van Kemenade and Christine Meklenborg: Issues in the left
periphery of Old French and Old English: Topic types and the V2
constraint
* 11: Sam Wolfe: Evaluating the contact hypothesis for Old French word
order
* 12: Ian Roberts: Second positions: A synchronic analysis and some
diachronic consequences
* 13: Kristin Føsker Hagemann and Signe Laake: Deconstructing stylistic
fronting in Old Norwegian and Old Spanish
* 14: Verner Egerland: The grammaticalization of sic: On narrative
particles in Romance and Scandinavian
* 15: Cecilia Poletto and Emanuela Sanfelici: Against complementizers
* 16: Richard S. Kayne: On complementizers and relative pronouns in
Germanic vs Romance
* Part III: Continuity and Variation beyond the Clause
* 17: Giuliana Giusti: Adjectival concord in Romance and Germanic
* 18: Jacopo Garzonio and Silvia Rossi: Functional and lexical
prepositions across Germanic and Romance
* 19: Kersti Börjars, Nigel Vincent, and Sam Wolfe: Locative
prepositions in the house
* 20: John Charles Smith: 'Have' in English and Romance
* References
* Index
* List of abbreviations
* The contributors
* 1: Sam Wolfe and Christine Meklenborg: Germanic and Romance: Data,
method, and theory
* Part I: The Subject System and the Inflectional Layer
* 2: Liliane Haegeman and Elisabeth Stark: Register-specific subject
omission in English and French and the syntax of coordination
* 3: Anna Cardinaletti: The position of subjects in Germanic and
Romance questions
* 4: Jan Casalicchio: Expressing perception in parallel ways:
Sentential Small Clauses in German and Romance
* 5: Federica Cognola and George Walkden: Pro-drop in interrogatives
across older Germanic and Romance languages
* 6: Matthew L. Maddox and Jonathan E. MacDonald: Reflexive
constructions in German, Spanish, and French as a product of cyclic
interaction
* 7: Benjamin L. Sluckin, Silvio Cruschina, and Fabienne Martin:
Locative inversion in Germanic and Romance: A conspiracy theory
* Part II: Inversion, Discourse Pragmatics, and the Left Periphery
* 8: Roland Hinterhölzl: V2 and topicalization in Germanic and Romance
* 9: Christine Meklenborg, Hans Peter Helland, and Terje Lohndal:
Topics in French and Norwegian
* 10: Ans van Kemenade and Christine Meklenborg: Issues in the left
periphery of Old French and Old English: Topic types and the V2
constraint
* 11: Sam Wolfe: Evaluating the contact hypothesis for Old French word
order
* 12: Ian Roberts: Second positions: A synchronic analysis and some
diachronic consequences
* 13: Kristin Føsker Hagemann and Signe Laake: Deconstructing stylistic
fronting in Old Norwegian and Old Spanish
* 14: Verner Egerland: The grammaticalization of sic: On narrative
particles in Romance and Scandinavian
* 15: Cecilia Poletto and Emanuela Sanfelici: Against complementizers
* 16: Richard S. Kayne: On complementizers and relative pronouns in
Germanic vs Romance
* Part III: Continuity and Variation beyond the Clause
* 17: Giuliana Giusti: Adjectival concord in Romance and Germanic
* 18: Jacopo Garzonio and Silvia Rossi: Functional and lexical
prepositions across Germanic and Romance
* 19: Kersti Börjars, Nigel Vincent, and Sam Wolfe: Locative
prepositions in the house
* 20: John Charles Smith: 'Have' in English and Romance
* References
* Index
* The contributors
* 1: Sam Wolfe and Christine Meklenborg: Germanic and Romance: Data,
method, and theory
* Part I: The Subject System and the Inflectional Layer
* 2: Liliane Haegeman and Elisabeth Stark: Register-specific subject
omission in English and French and the syntax of coordination
* 3: Anna Cardinaletti: The position of subjects in Germanic and
Romance questions
* 4: Jan Casalicchio: Expressing perception in parallel ways:
Sentential Small Clauses in German and Romance
* 5: Federica Cognola and George Walkden: Pro-drop in interrogatives
across older Germanic and Romance languages
* 6: Matthew L. Maddox and Jonathan E. MacDonald: Reflexive
constructions in German, Spanish, and French as a product of cyclic
interaction
* 7: Benjamin L. Sluckin, Silvio Cruschina, and Fabienne Martin:
Locative inversion in Germanic and Romance: A conspiracy theory
* Part II: Inversion, Discourse Pragmatics, and the Left Periphery
* 8: Roland Hinterhölzl: V2 and topicalization in Germanic and Romance
* 9: Christine Meklenborg, Hans Peter Helland, and Terje Lohndal:
Topics in French and Norwegian
* 10: Ans van Kemenade and Christine Meklenborg: Issues in the left
periphery of Old French and Old English: Topic types and the V2
constraint
* 11: Sam Wolfe: Evaluating the contact hypothesis for Old French word
order
* 12: Ian Roberts: Second positions: A synchronic analysis and some
diachronic consequences
* 13: Kristin Føsker Hagemann and Signe Laake: Deconstructing stylistic
fronting in Old Norwegian and Old Spanish
* 14: Verner Egerland: The grammaticalization of sic: On narrative
particles in Romance and Scandinavian
* 15: Cecilia Poletto and Emanuela Sanfelici: Against complementizers
* 16: Richard S. Kayne: On complementizers and relative pronouns in
Germanic vs Romance
* Part III: Continuity and Variation beyond the Clause
* 17: Giuliana Giusti: Adjectival concord in Romance and Germanic
* 18: Jacopo Garzonio and Silvia Rossi: Functional and lexical
prepositions across Germanic and Romance
* 19: Kersti Börjars, Nigel Vincent, and Sam Wolfe: Locative
prepositions in the house
* 20: John Charles Smith: 'Have' in English and Romance
* References
* Index