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E-raamat: Syntax of Hungarian

(Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest)
  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Cambridge Syntax Guides
  • Ilmumisaeg: 13-Jun-2002
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780511033278
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Cambridge Syntax Guides
  • Ilmumisaeg: 13-Jun-2002
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780511033278
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Clearly written and comprehensive in scope, this is an essential guide to syntax in the Hungarian language. It describes the key grammatical features of the language, focusing on the phenomena that have proved to be theoretically the most relevant and have attracted the most attention. The analysis of Hungarian in the generative framework since the late Seventies has helped to bring phenomena which are non-overt in the English language into the focus of syntactic research. As Kiss shows, its results have been built into the hypotheses that make up universal grammar. The textbook explores issues at the centre of theoretical debates including the syntax and semantics of focus, the analysis of quantifier scope, and negative concord. This useful guide will be welcomed by students and researchers working on syntax and those interested in Finno-Ugric languages.

Arvustused

'It is entirely fitting that Katalin É. Kiss should be the author of this welcome addition to the Cambridge Syntax Guides series This offers an introduction not only to aspects that have attracted international interest in recent years but also to areas less explored in traditional Hungarian synchronic linguistics '. Slavonic & East European Review 'The book represents a systematic study of Hungarian sentance structure. In each chapter the reader is led through detailed arguementaions, a wealth of data and presentations of several previous analyses with their merits and shortcomings discussed. ... this book provides a detailed investigation of a wide range of phenomena in Hungarian syntax... It is both an invaluable summary of the results of contemporary syntactic research on Hungarian and original work in all senses of the word. I recommend this book to anyone who is interested in issues concerning the structure of Hungarian.' Acta Linguistica Hungarica

Muu info

Clearly written and comprehensive in scope, this is an essential guide to syntax in Hungarian.
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction
1(7)
Genealogy, areal distribution
1(1)
A general overview of the syntactic and morphosyntactic features of Hungarian
2(6)
The topic-predicate articulation of the sentence
8(19)
The topic function
8(1)
The formal features of the topic constituent
9(2)
The marking of the topic-predicate boundary
11(1)
The topic projection
12(2)
Apparent and real topicless sentences. The (in)definiteness effect
14(6)
Sentence adverbials and the topic-predicate articulation
20(2)
The contrastive topic
22(3)
Summary
25(2)
The minimal predicate
27(50)
Argument order in the VP
27(2)
The referentiality effect
29(1)
The subject as an internal argument
30(3)
The structure of the VP
33(10)
Morphosyntactic projections
43(12)
The verbal prefix
55(16)
The nominal predicate
71(4)
Summary
75(2)
Focussing
77(28)
The focus function
77(6)
The syntax of focus
83(6)
Inherent foci
89(4)
Only-phrases
93(5)
Wh-questions
98(6)
Summary
104(1)
Quantification
105(25)
Distributive quantifiers at the head of the predicate
105(5)
The DistP projection
110(3)
The scope principle
113(13)
Quantifiers or adverbial modifiers?
126(3)
Summary
129(1)
Negation
130(21)
Two NegP projections
130(6)
The locus of negative pronouns licensed by nem
136(4)
The status of sem
140(2)
The universal and existential readings of negative pronouns
142(5)
Long distance negative polarity
147(1)
The negative existential verb
148(1)
Summary
149(2)
The noun phrase
151(30)
The basic syntactic layers of the noun phrase
151(4)
Evidence for the different noun phrase projections
155(2)
The possessive construction
157(18)
Non-possessor arguments in the noun phrase
175(4)
Summary
179(2)
The postpositional phrase
181(18)
Restricting the category of postpositions
181(3)
The formal properties of postpositional phrases
184(4)
The structure of the postpositional phrase
188(3)
PPs as verb modifiers
191(3)
Case-marked pronouns or PPs?
194(3)
Summary
197(2)
Non-finite and semi-finite verb phrases
199(31)
Introduction
199(1)
Subject and object control constructions
199(6)
Infinitival complex predicates
205(5)
Agreeing infinitives with a case-marked subject
210(11)
Adverbial participle phrases
221(6)
Adjectival participle phrases
227(2)
Summary
229(1)
The subordinate clause
230(35)
Introduction
230(1)
Thai-clauses
230(13)
Relative clauses
243(5)
Adverbial clauses
248(2)
Long operator movement
250(10)
Parasitic gaps
260(2)
Summary
262(3)
References 265(10)
Index 275