Acknowledgements |
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vii | |
Contents to Volume I |
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xvii | |
Contents to Volume II |
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xix | |
Abbreviations, Terms, and Orthographic Conventions |
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xxii | |
A Note on Hebrew Transcription |
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xxiv | |
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1 Introduction---Words? What Words? |
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1 | (50) |
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1 | (5) |
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1.2 The Remarks Challenge |
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6 | (7) |
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1.3 Moving Away from the "Word" |
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13 | (10) |
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1.3.1 A snapshot and road signs |
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13 | (4) |
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1.3.2 Phonological considerations and realizational models |
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17 | (3) |
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1.3.3 In defense of derivational constituents, preliminary |
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20 | (3) |
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23 | (6) |
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1.5 Functors, Preliminary |
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29 | (15) |
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1.5.1 Two kinds of functors |
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29 | (2) |
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1.5.2 Category labels---a clarification |
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31 | (2) |
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1.5.3 S-functors as range assignors |
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33 | (5) |
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1.5.4 S-functors and phonological indices |
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38 | (5) |
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1.5.5 Functors---a brief summary |
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43 | (1) |
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44 | (7) |
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Part I The Form, the Forming, and the Formation of Nominals |
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51 | (30) |
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2.1 Neo-constructionist Approaches to Grimshaw's Typology |
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51 | (12) |
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2.2 Structural Considerations |
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63 | (8) |
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2.2.1 AS-nominals vs. other nominals |
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64 | (5) |
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2.2.2 AS-nominals vs. verbal event complexes |
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69 | (2) |
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2.3 Event Structure: the Building Blocks |
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71 | (6) |
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2.4 AS-nominals, Preliminary Structures |
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77 | (1) |
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2.5 The Organization of Part I |
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78 | (3) |
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3 Embedding Syntactic Events within Nominals |
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81 | (55) |
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3.1 Hebrew AS-nominals: Structures |
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81 | (8) |
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3.2 On Word Order Differences between AS-nominals and R-nominals |
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89 | (7) |
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3.3 The Object Marker 'et |
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96 | (13) |
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3.3.1 Siloni's analysis of 'et in derived nominals |
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97 | (8) |
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105 | (4) |
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3.4 The Preposition ?al yedey |
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109 | (2) |
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111 | (7) |
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3.5.1 Distribution, categorial classification |
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111 | (3) |
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3.5.2 Aspectual and evidential adverbs |
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114 | (4) |
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3.6 Hebrew AS-nominals: Tentative Summary |
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118 | (1) |
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3.7 Evidence for a VP in English de-verbal AS-nominals |
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119 | (11) |
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119 | (1) |
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3.7.2 The VP anaphor do so in English AS-nominals |
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120 | (3) |
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3.7.3 Adverbs in English AS-nominals |
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123 | (2) |
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3.7.4 Adjectives vs. adverbs in AS-nominals |
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125 | (3) |
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3.7.5 Adverb placement---some structural considerations and questions to pursue |
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128 | (2) |
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3.8 Evidence for AP in English De-adjectival AS-nominals |
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130 | (4) |
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3.9 Of the Onward Journey |
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134 | (2) |
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4 AS-nominals and AS-nominalizers |
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136 | (45) |
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4.1 The Licensing of Arguments |
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136 | (17) |
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4.1.1 Event structure---the schemes |
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136 | (7) |
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4.1.2 How many arguments? R-nominals vs. AS-nominals |
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143 | (6) |
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4.1.3 Blocking ditransitives in AS-nominals |
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149 | (4) |
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4.2 Outstanding Issues and the Organization of this Chapter |
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153 | (3) |
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4.3 English Nominalizing Suffixes---Preliminaries |
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156 | (6) |
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4.3.1 On the non-existence of "Ø-derived" nominals, preliminary |
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157 | (1) |
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4.3.2 INGN[ V] nominalizers: Are they always AS-nominals? |
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158 | (4) |
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4.4 AS-ING Nominals are Homogeneous; AS-ATK Nominals need not be |
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162 | (5) |
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4.5 AS-ING Nominals Entail an Originator; AS-ATK Nominals need not |
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167 | (2) |
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4.6 Accounting for Particle Shift Effects in AS-nominals |
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169 | (4) |
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173 | (5) |
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173 | (2) |
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175 | (3) |
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4.8 The Structure of Long AS-nominals---Summary |
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178 | (3) |
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5 Event Structure in Short Nominals---the Passive Paradigm |
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181 | (62) |
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181 | (5) |
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5.2 Evidence for the Passive in Hebrew AS-nominals |
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186 | (3) |
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5.3 De-adjectival Nominals |
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189 | (9) |
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5.3.1 An asymmetry and its resolution |
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189 | (4) |
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5.3.2 Short AS-nominals, S-nominals, and scope |
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193 | (3) |
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5.3.3 The return of the PRO/pro |
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196 | (2) |
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5.4 Passive in Broad Strokes |
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198 | (5) |
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5.5 A Passive Analysis for AS-nominals |
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203 | (20) |
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5.5.1 Quantity structures |
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203 | (3) |
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5.5.2 Non-quantity structures, transitive |
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206 | (2) |
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5.5.3 Non-quantity structures, PP-complements |
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208 | (4) |
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5.5.4 Hebrew, supplemental: scope, potential objections, and conative variants |
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212 | (11) |
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223 | (7) |
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5.6.1 Raising passive and quantity |
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223 | (4) |
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5.6.2 Raising to Spec, D and non-quantity |
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227 | (3) |
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5.7 Dedicated Passive Nominals, Hebrew |
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230 | (8) |
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238 | (5) |
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243 | (68) |
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6.1 Preliminaries: Bare Phrase Structure |
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243 | (14) |
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6.1.1 Projections and categories |
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243 | (7) |
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250 | (7) |
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257 | (30) |
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6.2.1 S-functors and C-functors---an overview |
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257 | (3) |
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6.2.2 C-functors in a root-based system: categorial selection? |
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260 | (8) |
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6.2.3 C-functors---distribution |
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268 | (4) |
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6.2.4 C-functors and AS-nominals |
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272 | (3) |
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6.2.5 C-functors: locality |
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275 | (12) |
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6.3 Extended Projections, Functors, and Roots |
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287 | (7) |
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6.4 Outstanding: Linearization, Adjunction, Prefixes |
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294 | (11) |
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305 | (1) |
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Appendix: English C-Functors---a Methodological Note |
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306 | (5) |
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311 | (68) |
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311 | (6) |
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7.2 Categorization---Evidence and Competing Accounts |
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317 | (5) |
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317 | (1) |
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7.2.2 Distributed Morphology |
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318 | (4) |
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7.3 Against English Zero Categorizers, Part I |
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322 | (28) |
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7.3.1 Some general considerations |
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322 | (1) |
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7.3.2 Zero categorizers: the problem of distributional restrictions |
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323 | (8) |
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7.3.3 Zero categorizers: the problem of de-verbal nominals |
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331 | (5) |
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336 | (7) |
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7.3.5 Zero categorizers: the selection problem |
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343 | (4) |
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347 | (3) |
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7.4 Against English Zero Categorizers, Part II: Kiparsky (1982a, 1997) |
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350 | (13) |
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7.4.1 Two de-nominal verbs in English? |
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351 | (1) |
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352 | (1) |
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353 | (2) |
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7.4.4 An argument from ordering |
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355 | (5) |
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7.4.5 Triplets and the proliferation of Ø nominalizers |
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360 | (1) |
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7.4.6 Irregular inflection and the direction of derivation |
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361 | (2) |
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7.5 Multi-Categorial Instantiations for C-Functors: the Case of ING |
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363 | (8) |
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7.6 The Puzzle of the Adjective |
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371 | (8) |
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379 | (39) |
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8.1 On the Phonological Reality of Roots |
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379 | (10) |
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8.1.1 Allomorphs in compound roots |
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382 | (2) |
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384 | (3) |
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8.1.3 Merging the phonological indices of functors |
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387 | (1) |
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8.1.4 Phonological root selection |
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388 | (1) |
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8.2 Faithfulness and Roots |
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389 | (14) |
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8.2.1 Morphology is morpho-phonology! |
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389 | (8) |
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8.2.2 A note on suppletion |
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397 | (6) |
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8.3 But do Roots Have (Syntactically Active) Content, Nonetheless? |
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403 | (9) |
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8.3.1 A note on over-generation |
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408 | (4) |
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8.4 Coercion---One More Argument for No-Content Roots |
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412 | (6) |
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418 | (62) |
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9.1 Two Puzzles: R-nominals vs. AS-nominals |
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418 | (18) |
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418 | (2) |
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9.1.2 R-nominals and AS-nominals---a brief recap |
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420 | (3) |
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9.1.3 R-nominals vs. AS-nominals---Content compositionality |
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423 | (7) |
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9.1.4 AS-nominals vs. R-nominals: morpho-phonological considerations |
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430 | (2) |
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9.1.5 The verb within AS-nominals, again |
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432 | (4) |
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9.2 Domains of Content, Domains of Spellout |
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436 | (17) |
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436 | (2) |
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9.2.2 Phase (and hence Content) at categorization |
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438 | (10) |
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9.2.3 Phase (including Content) by Level Ordering |
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448 | (5) |
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9.3 ExP-Segments and S-Functors---the Content Domain |
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453 | (17) |
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453 | (2) |
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9.3.2 Delimiting en-searching---assigning Content to the C-core |
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455 | (4) |
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9.3.3 Content assignment---compounds |
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459 | (2) |
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9.3.4 Resolving the puzzles: R-nominals vs. AS-nominals |
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461 | (5) |
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466 | (2) |
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9.3.6 A phase-based execution---preliminary motivation and emerging queries |
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468 | (2) |
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470 | (10) |
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470 | (5) |
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9.4.2 The spelling out of Content vs. the Contenting of spellout |
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475 | (3) |
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478 | (2) |
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Appendix: Why Phrasal Idioms are Different |
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480 | (159) |
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480 | (3) |
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A2 Semantic and Content arguments for (partial) idiom compositionality |
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483 | (2) |
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A3 Syntactic arguments for the (partial) compositionality of phrasal idioms |
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485 | (1) |
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A4 Phrasal idioms and derived nominals |
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486 | (3) |
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489 | (34) |
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10.1 Spellout by Phase and Root Locality |
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489 | (13) |
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10.1.1 Phases and spellout---the issues |
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489 | (5) |
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10.1.2 Phases and locality conditions on roots |
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494 | (2) |
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10.1.3 Phases and inflectional allomorphy |
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496 | (4) |
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10.1.4 The pieces---how tight the fit? |
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500 | (2) |
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10.2 Content and Spellout---an Interaction |
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502 | (6) |
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10.3 The Domain of Content---Final Refinements |
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508 | (4) |
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10.4 Mismatches Revisited |
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512 | (1) |
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10.5 A Note on Category Labels |
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513 | (4) |
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10.6 Bringing it all Together |
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517 | (6) |
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11 Semitic Verbal Derivatives: Prolegomena |
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523 | (52) |
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11.1 Binyanim---the Builders |
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523 | (14) |
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523 | (3) |
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11.1.2 Climbing up the extended projection ladder |
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526 | (4) |
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11.1.3 Binyanim and the merger of C-functors |
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530 | (7) |
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11.2 Qal: neither a Binyan nor a Builder |
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537 | (10) |
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537 | (2) |
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539 | (8) |
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11.3 Categorization and Mono-morphemic Verbs |
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547 | (6) |
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547 | (2) |
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11.3.2 Alternative perspectives? |
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549 | (4) |
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11.4 Semitic Verbs: the Domain of Content |
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553 | (9) |
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11.5 Categorial Complement Space and the Semitic Verbal System: Road Signs |
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562 | (13) |
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562 | (2) |
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11.5.2 Verbal Complement Space |
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564 | (6) |
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11.5.3 Other types of Complement Space |
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570 | (5) |
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575 | (55) |
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575 | (2) |
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577 | (6) |
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12.2.1 Preliminaries and the First Sister Principle |
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577 | (3) |
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12.2.2 On the absence of event structure in Syn-Compounds |
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580 | (1) |
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12.2.3 On the absence of event structure: syntactic problems |
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581 | (2) |
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12.3 Some Non-solutions, Some Additional Problems |
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583 | (12) |
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12.3.1 Root incorporation---a syntactic non-solution |
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583 | (4) |
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12.3.2 The obligatory transitivity of Syn-Compounds |
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587 | (4) |
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12.3.3 Whither the Unaccusative Hypothesis? |
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591 | (1) |
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12.3.4 Incorporation into a nominal---another non-solution |
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592 | (1) |
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12.3.5 A lexicalist treatment---third non-solution |
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593 | (2) |
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595 | (3) |
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12.5 Syn-Compounds---What Remains |
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598 | (17) |
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12.5.1 Explaining what remains |
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598 | (8) |
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12.5.2 ER---some open questions |
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606 | (9) |
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12.6 R-ING/Synthetic Compounds---Homogeneity and Originators |
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615 | (7) |
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12.6.1 Simple event nominals |
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615 | (2) |
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12.6.2 R-ING is homogeneous |
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617 | (2) |
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12.6.3 R-ING entails an Originator |
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619 | (3) |
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12.7 Syn-Compounds: Structures, En-searches, and Other Relevant Matters |
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622 | (6) |
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628 | (2) |
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630 | (9) |
References |
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639 | (18) |
Terminal Index |
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657 | (2) |
Name Index |
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659 | (3) |
Subject Index |
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662 | |