Jan-Wouter Zwart is Professor of Theoretical Linguistics at the University of Groningen. He studied Latin and Ancient Greek at the University of Nijmegen and linguistics at Groningen, where he defended his award-winning dissertation 'Dutch Syntax: A Minimalist Approach' in 1993. Professor Zwart was a visiting scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1991 and a visiting professor at the University of Geneva in 2002. His research and teaching centres around theoretical syntax, including also linguistic typology, historical linguistics, dialectology and Germanic linguistics. He is the author of Morphosyntax of Verb Movement (1996) and the editor of Groninger Arbeiten zur Germanistischen Linguistik.
Part I. Introduction: 1. Dutch: the language, its history, its dialects
2. Basic morphosyntax
3. Perspectives on Dutch syntax
Part II. Description: 4. Clause structure
5. Nominal and prepositional phrases
6. Complex sentences
7. Dependencies
Part III. Theory: 8. The structural realization of lexical semantics
9. Dutch as an OV/VO language
10. Verb second
11. Verb clusters
12. Nominal and prepositional phrases
13. Binding and control.