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E-raamat: Syntax of Dutch

(Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, The Netherlands)
  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Cambridge Syntax Guides
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Sep-2011
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781139118507
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Cambridge Syntax Guides
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Sep-2011
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781139118507
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"Dutch is a West-Germanic language closely related to English and German, but its special properties have long aroused interest and debate among students of syntax. This is an informative guide to the syntax of Dutch, offering an extensive survey of boththe phenomena of Dutch syntax and their theoretical analyses over the years. In particular the book discusses those aspects of Dutch syntax that have played an important role in the development of syntactic theory in recent decades. Presupposing only a basic knowledge of syntax and complete with an extensive bibliography, this survey will be an important tool for students and linguists of all theoretical persuasions, and for anyone working in Germanic linguistics, linguistic typology and linguistic theory"--

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For the first time in English, a complete guide to the phenomena and analyses of Dutch syntax.
Preface ix
Abbreviations used in the glosses xi
PART I INTRODUCTION
1(30)
1 Dutch: the language, its history, its dialects
3(3)
2 Basic morphosyntax
6(19)
2.1 General typological characteristics
6(1)
2.2 Word classes
7(4)
2.3 Morphosyntactic features
11(6)
2.4 Grammatical functions
17(4)
2.5 Constituents
21(1)
2.6 Sentence prosody
22(3)
3 Perspectives on Dutch syntax
25(6)
PART II DESCRIPTION
31(190)
4 Clause structure
33(47)
4.1 The left bracket
38(3)
4.2 The right bracket
41(9)
4.3 The middle field
50(18)
4.3.1 Objects
53(5)
4.3.2 Adverbs
58(4)
4.3.3 Other middle-field elements
62(4)
4.3.4 The middle-field borders
66(2)
4.4 The initial field
68(4)
4.5 The final field
72(8)
5 Nominal and prepositional phrases
80(24)
5.1 Noun phrase structure
80(6)
5.2 The order of attributive modifiers
86(4)
5.3 Adjective phrase structure
90(3)
5.4 Nominalization
93(2)
5.5 Preposition phrase structure
95(9)
6 Complex sentences
104(41)
6.1 Subordination
104(13)
6.1.1 Diagnostics
104(3)
6.1.2 Finite embedded clauses
107(3)
6.1.3 Nonfinite embedded clauses
110(2)
6.1.4 Relative clauses
112(5)
6.2 Coordination
117(5)
6.2.1 General remarks
117(2)
6.2.2 Clausal coordination
119(3)
6.3 Unclear cases
122(5)
6.4 Ellipsis
127(18)
6.4.1 General remarks
127(3)
6.4.2 Noun ellipsis
130(2)
6.4.3 Conjunction reduction
132(5)
6.4.4 Gapping
137(4)
6.4.5 Other ellipsis phenomena
141(4)
7 Dependencies
145(76)
7.1 Semi-referential expressions
145(7)
7.2 Raising and control
152(20)
7.2.1 Raising and control diagnostics
152(6)
7.2.2 Modal verbs
158(6)
7.2.3 Raising
164(5)
7.2.4 Control
169(3)
7.3 Negation
172(13)
7.3.1 Types of me?
172(3)
7.3.2 Negation with indefinites
175(1)
7.3.3 Negation in complex clauses
175(4)
7.3.4 Negative polarity
179(6)
7.4 Quantification
185(6)
7.4.1 Inventory of quantifiers
185(3)
7.4.2 Scope relations
188(3)
7.5 Focus and topic
191(7)
7.5.1 Focus
191(6)
7.5.2 Topic
197(1)
7.6 Wh-movement
198(23)
7.6.1 Fronting of interrogative elements
198(4)
7.6.2 Conditions on wh-movement
202(11)
7.6.3 Gaps
213(8)
PART III THEORY
221(134)
8 The structural realization of lexical semantics
223(20)
8.1 Arguments and grammatical functions
223(10)
8.2 The small-clause analysis
233(8)
8.3 The complex predicate analysis
241(2)
9 Dutch as an OV/VO language
243(38)
9.1 Preliminaries
243(4)
9.2 Dutch as an OV language
247(18)
9.2.1 Koster (1975)
247(4)
9.2.2 Derivation of the major patterns
251(14)
9.3 Dutch as a head-initial language
265(16)
9.3.1 Zwart (1994)
265(3)
9.3.2 Some consequences
268(13)
10 Verb second
281(15)
10.1 Historiography
281(9)
10.2 Theoretical embedding
290(6)
11 Verb clusters
296(28)
11.1 Structuralist work on verb clusters
299(3)
11.2 The classical verb-raising analysis
302(11)
11.3 Minimalist analyses
313(11)
12 Nominal and prepositional phrases
324(20)
12.1 Noun phrases
324(9)
12.1.1 Constituent structure
324(1)
12.1.2 The DP analysis
325(4)
12.1.3 Movement phenomena
329(4)
12.2 Adjective phrases
333(5)
12.2.1 Order and interpretation
333(2)
12.2.2 Ellipsis and the -e suffix
335(2)
12.2.3 Movement phenomena
337(1)
12.3 Preposition phrases
338(6)
12.3.1 Internal structure
338(3)
12.3.2 Movement phenomena
341(3)
13 Binding and control
344(11)
13.1 Binding
344(6)
13.2 Control
350(5)
Appendices
355(13)
1 Pronouns
357(3)
2 Adpositions
360(3)
3 Auxiliaries and modal verbs
363(2)
4 Verbs taking infinitival complements
365(2)
5 Verbal inflection
367(1)
References 368(22)
Index 390
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.