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An argument that agreement and agreementless languages are unified under an expanded view of grammatical features including both phi-features and certain discourse configurational features.
"A syntactic analysis of and solution to the semantic problem: how can speakers convey the same meaning using different speech acts?"--
Aronoff integrates an account of morphological structure into a general theory of generative grammar.
The first book-length treatment of Japanese phonology from the perspective of Optimality Theory.
An argument for the universal syntactic nature of the composition of manner and motion in human languages; with a wealth of empirical evidence from Germanic, Korean, and Romance languages.
A theory of control, equally grounded in syntax and semantics, that argues that obligatory control is achieved either through predication or through logophoric anchoring.
A new theory of labeling that sheds light on such syntactic phenomena as relativization, successive cyclicity, island phenomena, and Minimality effects.
A new analysis of adjectives, supported by comparative evidence.
While the study of government and binding is an outgrowth of Chomsky's earlier work in transformational grammar, it represents a significant shift in focus and a new direction of investigation into the fundamentals of linguistic theory.
A study of the interface between syntax and phonology that seeks deeper explanations for such syntactic problems as case phenomena and the distribution of overt and covert wh-movement.
A view of the locality conditions on vowel harmony, aligning empirical phenomena within phonology with the principles of the Minimalist program.
An exploration of the architecture of the grammar, where conditions apply, and the nature of the lexical/functional split.
This minimalist study proposes that the computational system of human language must consist of strictly local operations.
A radically new approach to argument structure in the minimalist program.
This monograph presents an important extension of government-binding theory in syntax.
It is standardly assumed that Universal Grammar (UG) allows a given hierarchical representation to be associated with more than one linear order. This book proposes a restrictive theory of word order and phrase structure that denies this assumption. According to this theory, phrase structure always completely determines linear order, so that if two phrases differ in linear order, they must also differ in hierarchical structure.
An argument that the word order of a given language is largely predictable from independently observable facts about its phonology and morphology.
A proposal for a compositional semantics for subjunctive (or would) conditionals in English.
A novel view of the syntax-semantics interface that analyzes the behavior of indefinite objects.
A new theory of the syntax-semantics interface that relies on hierarchical orderings in language, with the English auxiliary system as its empirical ground.
The central idea of this book is that movement and phrase structure are not independent properties of grammar; instead, movement is triggered by the geometry of phrase structure. Using this idea of "Dynamic antisymmetry", the book analyzes the consequences for the design of grammar.
A study of indefinites in Maori and Chamorro and their relevance to the interaction of compositional semantic interpretation and syntactic structure.
Argument Structure is a contribution to linguistics at the interface between lexical syntax and lexical semantics.
A comprehensive theory of selective opacity effects-configurations in which syntactic domains are opaque to some processes but transparent to others-within a Minimalist framework.
A systematic exposition of Reinhart's Theta System, with extensive annotations and essays that capture subsequent developments.
An investigation of the syntactic structure of voice and v, using Acehnese (Malayo-Polynesian) as the empirical starting point.
An investigation of the syntax and semantics of wh-questions through the lens of intervention effects, offering a new proposal on overt and covert wh-movement.
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