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E-raamat: Relative Clauses: Structure and Variation in Everyday English

(University of Essex)
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Brings to light largely unreported and unanalysed types of non-standard relative clauses in everyday English. A sophisticated and empirically rich analysis, it will be of interest to researchers and students working on syntax, the English language, language variation, corpus linguistics, experimental linguistics, and language change.

Using novel examples from live, unscripted radio/TV broadcasts and the internet, this path-breaking book will force us to reconsider the nature of everyday English and its complex interplay of syntactic, pragmatic, sociolinguistic and psycholinguistic factors. Uncovering unusual types of non-standard relative clauses, Andrew Radford develops theoretically sophisticated analyses in an area that has traditionally hardly been touched on: that of nonstandard (yet not clearly dialectal) variation in English. Making sense of a huge amount of data, the book demonstrates that some types of non-standard relative clauses have a complex syntactic structure of their own in which the relation between the relative clause and its antecedent is either syntactically encoded or pragmatic in nature, while others come about as a result of hypercorrection, and yet others arise from processing errors.

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A sophisticated analysis of non-standard relative clauses in everyday English, using novel data from live, unscripted radio/TV broadcasts and the internet.
Acknowledgements xi
Prologue 1(6)
1 Background
7(47)
1.1 Introduction
7(1)
1.2 Types of Relative Clause
7(8)
1.3 The Structure of Relative Clauses
15(9)
1.4 Truncated Relative Clauses
24(8)
1.5 Relativisers
32(13)
1.6 Derivation of Relatives
45(7)
1.7 Summary
52(2)
2 Resumptive Relatives
54(78)
2.1 Introduction
54(1)
2.2 Existing Research
55(11)
2.3 Inaccessibility Hypothesis
66(17)
2.4 Resumptive Relativisers
83(12)
2.5 Pronominal Resumptives
95(18)
2.6 Nominal Resumptives
113(10)
2.7 Relative and Topic Structures
123(7)
2.8 Summary
130(2)
3 Prepositional Relatives
132(59)
3.1 Introduction
132(3)
3.2 Preposition Doubling as Copying
135(11)
3.3 Preposition Doubling as Splitting
146(8)
3.4 Preposition Intrusion
154(12)
3.5 Preposition Doubling and Intrusion as Hypercorrection
166(9)
3.6 Preposition Doubling and Intrusion as Speech Errors
175(13)
3.7 Summary
188(3)
4 Gapless Relatives
191(52)
4.1 Introduction
191(1)
4.2 Stranded Preposition Analyses
192(8)
4.3 A Fronted Preposition Analysis
200(14)
4.4 Prepositionless Analyses
214(18)
4.5 Processing Analyses
232(10)
4.6 Summary
242(1)
Epilogue 243(2)
Glossary and Abbreviations 245(27)
References 272(38)
Index 310
Andrew Radford is Emeritus Professor of Linguistics at the University of Essex. His many books include Minimalist Syntax (Cambridge, 2004), Analysing English Sentences (Cambridge, 2nd edition, 2016) and Colloquial English: Structure and Variation (Cambridge, 2018).