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E-raamat: Analysing English Sentences

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Andrew Radford has acquired an unrivalled reputation over the past thirty years for writing syntax textbooks in which difficult concepts are clearly explained without the excessive use of technical jargon. Analysing English Sentences continues in this tradition, offering a well-structured introduction to English syntax and contemporary syntactic theory which is supported throughout with learning aids such as summaries, lists of key hypotheses and principles, extensive references, handy hints and exercises. Instructors will also benefit from the book's free online resources, which include PowerPoint slides of chapter key points and analyses of exercise material, as well as an answer key for all the in-book exercises. This second edition has been thoroughly revised and updated throughout, including additional exercises and an entirely new chapter on exclamative and relative clauses. Assuming no prior knowledge of grammar, this is an approachable introduction to the subject for undergraduate and graduate students.

Arvustused

'Masterly, challenging and radically innovative.' Neil Smith, University College London 'I learned the basics of syntactic argumentation by reading (and doing the exercises in) Andrew Radford's 1981 Transformational Syntax. Analysing English Sentences is an excellent continuation of that tradition.' Chris Collins, New York University 'Another outstanding textbook from Radford - it is very up to date and takes students through the complexities of syntactic theory and how to do syntactic analysis in the most manageable way possible.' Alison Henry, University of Ulster 'Andrew Radford's new edition of Analysing English Sentences is, like his previous textbooks, unparalleled for clarity, thoroughness and critical depth. In addition to offering an outstanding, step-by-step guide to the key notions of current syntactic theory, it provides through its exercise material a unique tool for students to assess the merits of a syntactic argument and to construct their own analyses.' Guglielmo Cinque, Ca' Foscari University, Venice

Muu info

A step-by-step introduction to English syntax and contemporary syntactic theory, full of helpful features for students and instructors alike.
Preface xi
1 Grammar
1(59)
1.1 Overview
1(1)
1.2 Approaches to grammar
1(8)
1.3 Traditional grammar
9(10)
1.4 Universals
19(5)
1.5 The nature of universals
24(5)
1.6 Language acquisition
29(4)
1.7 Parameters
33(6)
1.8 Parameter setting
39(9)
1.9 Summary
48(2)
1.10 Bibliographical background
50(10)
Workbook section
52(8)
2 Words
60(51)
2.1 Overview
60(1)
2.2 Grammatical categories
60(8)
2.3 Categorising words
68(2)
2.4 Functional categories
70(3)
2.5 Determiners and quantifiers
73(3)
2.6 Pronouns
76(4)
2.7 Auxiliaries
80(2)
2.8 Infinitival to
82(4)
2.9 Complementisers
86(6)
2.10 Categorisation problems
92(7)
2.11 Grammatical features
99(4)
2.12 Summary
103(1)
2.13 Bibliographical background
104(7)
Workbook section
105(6)
3 Structure
111(61)
3.1 Overview
111(1)
3.2 Phrases
111(5)
3.3 Clauses
116(5)
3.4 Specifiers
121(4)
3.5 Intermediate and maximal projections
125
3.6 Testing structure
32(114)
3.7 Structural relations
146(8)
3.8 Word order
154(2)
3.9 Summary
156(2)
3.10 Bibliographical background
158(14)
Workbook section
160(12)
4 Null constituents
172(73)
4.1 Overview
172(1)
4.2 Null subjects
172(6)
4.3 Null T in elliptical finite clauses
178(5)
4.4 Null T in indicative clauses
183(6)
4.5 Null T in subjunctive clauses
189(2)
4.6 Null T in infinitive clauses and small clauses
191(5)
4.7 Null C in finite clauses
196(11)
4.8 Null C in infinitive clauses
207(3)
4.9 Null complementisers and case-marking
210(7)
4.10 Defective clauses
217(4)
4.11 Null heads in nominals
221(12)
4.12 Summary
233(3)
4.13 Bibliographical background
236(9)
Workbook section
238(7)
5 Head Movement
245(72)
5.1 Overview
245(1)
5.2 Auxiliary Inversion
245(9)
5.3 Triggering Auxiliary Inversion
254(3)
5.4 CP recursion
257(2)
5.5 Null operators
259(6)
5.6 V-to-T Movement
265(5)
5.7 Head Movement
270(6)
5.8 Auxiliary Raising
276(8)
5.9 Another look at Negation
284(5)
5.10 DO-support
289(11)
5.11 Head Movement in nominals
300(6)
5.12 Summary
306(3)
5.13 Bibliographical background
309(8)
Workbook section
311(6)
6 Wh-Movement
317(69)
6.1 Overview
317(1)
6.2 Wh-Movement
317(3)
6.3 Evidence for Wh-Movement
320(4)
6.4 Driving Wh-Movement
324(7)
6.5 Subject questions
331(8)
6.6 Pied-piping
339(9)
6.7 Wh-Movement as copying
348(7)
6.8 Long Wh-Movement
355(10)
6.9 Constraints on movement
365(6)
6.10 Summary
371(5)
6.11 Bibliographical background
376(10)
Workbook section
378(8)
7 A-bar Movement
386(92)
7.1 Overview
386(1)
7.2 Wh-exclamatives
386(8)
7.3 Relative clauses
394(4)
7.4 A Wh-Movement account of restrictive relatives
398(8)
7.5 Problems with the Wh-Movement analysis
406(4)
7.6 An Antecedent Raising account of restrictive relatives
410(6)
7.7 Refining the Antecedent Raising analysis
416(5)
7.8 Problems with the Antecedent Raising analysis
421(9)
7.9 Two sources for restrictive relative clauses
430(8)
7.10 A-bar Movement
438(5)
7.11 Summary
443(3)
7.12 Bibliographical background
446(32)
Workbook section
447(31)
Glossary and list of abbreviations 478(53)
References 531(36)
Index 567
Andrew Radford is Emeritus Professor at the University of Essex. His popular textbooks include An Introduction to English Sentence Structure (2009), Minimalist Syntax (2004) and Syntactic Theory and the Structure of English (1997), all published by Cambridge University Press.