Nomi Erteschik-Shir / Lisa Rochman (Hrsg.)
The Sound Patterns of Syntax
Herausgeber: Erteschik-Shir, Nomi; Rochman, Lisa
Nomi Erteschik-Shir / Lisa Rochman (Hrsg.)
The Sound Patterns of Syntax
Herausgeber: Erteschik-Shir, Nomi; Rochman, Lisa
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In this book leading scholars address the issues surrounding the syntax-phonology interface. These principally concern whether the phonological component can influence syntax and if so how far and in what ways.
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In this book leading scholars address the issues surrounding the syntax-phonology interface. These principally concern whether the phonological component can influence syntax and if so how far and in what ways.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 400
- Erscheinungstermin: 12. März 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 735g
- ISBN-13: 9780199556861
- ISBN-10: 0199556865
- Artikelnr.: 29426091
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 400
- Erscheinungstermin: 12. März 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 735g
- ISBN-13: 9780199556861
- ISBN-10: 0199556865
- Artikelnr.: 29426091
Nomi Erteschik-Shir is Professor and Chair in the Department of Foreign Literatures and Linguistics at Ben Gurion University. She is the author of Information Structure (OUP, 2007) and co-editor with Tova Rapoport of The Syntax of Aspect: Deriving Thematic and Aspectual Information (OUP, 2005). Lisa Rochman is completing work at Ben Gurion University on the role of focus structure and phonology in floating quantifiers for her PhD dissertation.
* 1: Introduction
* 2: Tor Åfarli: Adjunction and 3D Phrase Structure: a Study of
Norwegian Adverbials
* 3: Nomi Erteschik-Shir: The Phonology of Adverb Placement, Object
Shift, and V-2; The Case of Danish 'MON'
* 4: Katalin E. Kiss: Is Free Postverbal Order in Hungarian a Syntactic
or a PF Phenomenon?
* 5: Lisa Rochman: Why Float: Floating Quantifiers and Focus Marking
* 6: João Costa: Prosodic Prominence: A Syntactic Matter?
* 7: Steven Franks: On the Mechanics of Spell-Out
* 8: Mamoru Saito: Semantic and Discourse Interpretation of the
Japanese Left Periphery
* 9: Mohinish Shukla and Marina Nespor: Rhythmic Patterns Cue Word
Order
* 10: Hubert Truckenbrodt and Isabelle Darcy: Object Clauses and
Phrasal Stress
* 11: Charles W. Kisseberth: Optimality Theory and the Theory of
phonological Phrasing: The Chimwiini Evidence
* 12: Sam Hellmuth: Functional Complementarity is Only Skin Deep:
Evidence From Etyptian Arabic for the Autonomy fo Syntax and
Phonology in the Expression of Focus
* 13: Caroline Féry: Syntax, Information Structure, Embedded Prosodic
Phrasing, and the Relational Scaling of Pitch Accents
* 14: Emily Nava and maria Luisa Zubizarreta: Deconstructing the
Nuclear Stress Algorithm: Evidence From Second Language Speech
* 15: Kriszta Szendroi: Focus as a Grammatical Notion: A Case Study in
Autism
* 16: Tobias Scheer: Intermodular Argumentation: Morpheme-specific
Phonologies are out of Business in a Phase-based Architecture
* 2: Tor Åfarli: Adjunction and 3D Phrase Structure: a Study of
Norwegian Adverbials
* 3: Nomi Erteschik-Shir: The Phonology of Adverb Placement, Object
Shift, and V-2; The Case of Danish 'MON'
* 4: Katalin E. Kiss: Is Free Postverbal Order in Hungarian a Syntactic
or a PF Phenomenon?
* 5: Lisa Rochman: Why Float: Floating Quantifiers and Focus Marking
* 6: João Costa: Prosodic Prominence: A Syntactic Matter?
* 7: Steven Franks: On the Mechanics of Spell-Out
* 8: Mamoru Saito: Semantic and Discourse Interpretation of the
Japanese Left Periphery
* 9: Mohinish Shukla and Marina Nespor: Rhythmic Patterns Cue Word
Order
* 10: Hubert Truckenbrodt and Isabelle Darcy: Object Clauses and
Phrasal Stress
* 11: Charles W. Kisseberth: Optimality Theory and the Theory of
phonological Phrasing: The Chimwiini Evidence
* 12: Sam Hellmuth: Functional Complementarity is Only Skin Deep:
Evidence From Etyptian Arabic for the Autonomy fo Syntax and
Phonology in the Expression of Focus
* 13: Caroline Féry: Syntax, Information Structure, Embedded Prosodic
Phrasing, and the Relational Scaling of Pitch Accents
* 14: Emily Nava and maria Luisa Zubizarreta: Deconstructing the
Nuclear Stress Algorithm: Evidence From Second Language Speech
* 15: Kriszta Szendroi: Focus as a Grammatical Notion: A Case Study in
Autism
* 16: Tobias Scheer: Intermodular Argumentation: Morpheme-specific
Phonologies are out of Business in a Phase-based Architecture
* 1: Introduction
* 2: Tor Åfarli: Adjunction and 3D Phrase Structure: a Study of
Norwegian Adverbials
* 3: Nomi Erteschik-Shir: The Phonology of Adverb Placement, Object
Shift, and V-2; The Case of Danish 'MON'
* 4: Katalin E. Kiss: Is Free Postverbal Order in Hungarian a Syntactic
or a PF Phenomenon?
* 5: Lisa Rochman: Why Float: Floating Quantifiers and Focus Marking
* 6: João Costa: Prosodic Prominence: A Syntactic Matter?
* 7: Steven Franks: On the Mechanics of Spell-Out
* 8: Mamoru Saito: Semantic and Discourse Interpretation of the
Japanese Left Periphery
* 9: Mohinish Shukla and Marina Nespor: Rhythmic Patterns Cue Word
Order
* 10: Hubert Truckenbrodt and Isabelle Darcy: Object Clauses and
Phrasal Stress
* 11: Charles W. Kisseberth: Optimality Theory and the Theory of
phonological Phrasing: The Chimwiini Evidence
* 12: Sam Hellmuth: Functional Complementarity is Only Skin Deep:
Evidence From Etyptian Arabic for the Autonomy fo Syntax and
Phonology in the Expression of Focus
* 13: Caroline Féry: Syntax, Information Structure, Embedded Prosodic
Phrasing, and the Relational Scaling of Pitch Accents
* 14: Emily Nava and maria Luisa Zubizarreta: Deconstructing the
Nuclear Stress Algorithm: Evidence From Second Language Speech
* 15: Kriszta Szendroi: Focus as a Grammatical Notion: A Case Study in
Autism
* 16: Tobias Scheer: Intermodular Argumentation: Morpheme-specific
Phonologies are out of Business in a Phase-based Architecture
* 2: Tor Åfarli: Adjunction and 3D Phrase Structure: a Study of
Norwegian Adverbials
* 3: Nomi Erteschik-Shir: The Phonology of Adverb Placement, Object
Shift, and V-2; The Case of Danish 'MON'
* 4: Katalin E. Kiss: Is Free Postverbal Order in Hungarian a Syntactic
or a PF Phenomenon?
* 5: Lisa Rochman: Why Float: Floating Quantifiers and Focus Marking
* 6: João Costa: Prosodic Prominence: A Syntactic Matter?
* 7: Steven Franks: On the Mechanics of Spell-Out
* 8: Mamoru Saito: Semantic and Discourse Interpretation of the
Japanese Left Periphery
* 9: Mohinish Shukla and Marina Nespor: Rhythmic Patterns Cue Word
Order
* 10: Hubert Truckenbrodt and Isabelle Darcy: Object Clauses and
Phrasal Stress
* 11: Charles W. Kisseberth: Optimality Theory and the Theory of
phonological Phrasing: The Chimwiini Evidence
* 12: Sam Hellmuth: Functional Complementarity is Only Skin Deep:
Evidence From Etyptian Arabic for the Autonomy fo Syntax and
Phonology in the Expression of Focus
* 13: Caroline Féry: Syntax, Information Structure, Embedded Prosodic
Phrasing, and the Relational Scaling of Pitch Accents
* 14: Emily Nava and maria Luisa Zubizarreta: Deconstructing the
Nuclear Stress Algorithm: Evidence From Second Language Speech
* 15: Kriszta Szendroi: Focus as a Grammatical Notion: A Case Study in
Autism
* 16: Tobias Scheer: Intermodular Argumentation: Morpheme-specific
Phonologies are out of Business in a Phase-based Architecture