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Potsdam, Eric – Language, 2009
Backward control is an obligatory interpretational dependency between an overt controller and a nonovert controllee in which the controllee is structurally superior to the controller: "Meg persuaded [Delta]i" ["Roni to give up"]. It contrasts with ordinary forward control, in which the controller is structurally higher: "Meg persuaded Roni"…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Malayo Polynesian Languages, Linguistic Theory, Structural Analysis (Linguistics)
Ladd, D. Robert; Remijsen, Bert; Manyang, Caguor Adong – Language, 2009
Discussions of the psycholinguistic significance of regularity in inflectional morphology generally deal with languages in which regular forms can be clearly identified and revolve around whether there are distinct processing mechanisms for regular and irregular forms. We present a detailed description of Dinka's notoriously irregular noun number…
Descriptors: Psycholinguistics, Form Classes (Languages), Morphology (Languages), Nouns

Simpson, Andrew; Wu, Zoe – Language, 2002
Reconsiders development and licensing of agreement as a syntactic projection and argues for a productive developmental relation between agreement and the category of focus. Suggests that focus projections are initially selected by a variety of functional heads with real semantic content, then, over time decays into a simple concord shell. Upon…
Descriptors: Semantics, Structural Analysis (Linguistics), Syntax

Aoun, Joseph; Li, Yen-hui Audrey – Language, 2000
This article is a reply to Kuno et al. 1999, which claims that a structural approach to scope should be replaced by an expert system. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Grammar, Linguistic Theory, Structural Analysis (Linguistics)

Shi, Dingxu – Language, 2000
Attempts to provide a precise definition for topic and to derive most of the properties of topic from this definition. The main assumption is that the topic-comment construction is a syntactic device employed to fulfill certain discourse functions. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Grammar, Mandarin Chinese, Structural Analysis (Linguistics), Syntax

Rapoport, T. R. – Language, 1999
Examines the constraints on depictive predicates and their interpretation within the aspectual structure theory of structural representation of aspect. This model allows a simple expression of the relation between the depictive adjunct predicate and its host by means of a parallel-structures analysis. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Linguistic Theory, Sentence Structure, Structural Analysis (Linguistics)

Schourup, Lawrence; Tamori, Ikuhiro – Language, 1992
Mester and Ito's evidence for the phonological theory of Restricted Underspecification (RU) is refuted. Attention is focused on reduplicated forms; and it is concluded that, if there is only a rough and sporadic sound-syllable meaning association with palatization, the argument for RU is untenable. (12 references) (LB)
Descriptors: Japanese, Linguistic Theory, Phonology, Structural Analysis (Linguistics)

Espinal, M. Teresa – Language, 1991
Describes the interaction between disjunct constituents and sentential structures and argues for an extension of the theoretical apparatus intially postulated in autosegmental phonology to represent complex syntactic structures containing disjunct constituents with a number of independent phrase markers that intersect at the linear axis. (66…
Descriptors: Linguistic Theory, Phonology, Sentence Structure, Structural Analysis (Linguistics)

Hedberg, Nancy – Language, 2000
Shows how the subject pronoun in a cleft sentence together with the cleft clause function pragmatically as a discontinuous definite description. Presents a new syntactic analysis of clefts, which treats the cleft clause as an extraposed complement of the cleft subject pronoun, adjoined to the clefted constituent. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Pragmatics, Pronouns, Sentence Structure, Structural Analysis (Linguistics)

Sag, Ivan A.; Pollard, Carl – Language, 1991
Presents an integrated theory of the syntactic and semantic representation of complements where the unexpressed subjects of the embedded verb-phrase complement are subject to certain interpretation restrictions. It is argued that the grammar of English controlled complements can be derived from the interaction of semantically based principles of…
Descriptors: English, Linguistic Theory, Pronouns, Semantics

Steedman, Mark – Language, 1991
Argues that English intonational structure and surface syntactic structure are one and can be captured in a single unified grammar. The interpretations that the grammar provides for such constituents corresponds to the entities and open propositions of intonational meaning that have been described as "theme" and "rheme,""given" and "new," and…
Descriptors: English, Grammar, Intonation, Linguistic Theory

Klein, Wolfgang – Language, 2000
Shows that the German "perfekt" has a uniform temporal meaning that results systematically from the interaction of its three components--finiteness marking, auxiliary, and past participle--and that the two readings are the consequence of a structural ambiguity. This analysis also predicts the properties of other participle constructions, in…
Descriptors: German, Sentence Structure, Structural Analysis (Linguistics), Tenses (Grammar)

Sorace, Antonella – Language, 2000
Presents evidence based on experimental data from Western European languages that there is orderly variation in the choice of perfective auxiliary with transitive verbs. Specifically, auxiliary selection is sensitive to a hierarchy of aspectual/thematic verb types: some verbs require a given auxiliary categorically; others allow both auxiliaries…
Descriptors: Indo European Languages, Linguistic Theory, Structural Analysis (Linguistics), Verbs

Ward, Gregory; And Others – Language, 1991
Argues that "outbound anaphora," contrary to the argument of Postal, is fully grammatical and governed by independently motivated pragmatic principles. The felicity of outbound anaphora is demonstrated to be a function of the accessibility of the discourse entity that is evoked by the word-internal element and to which the anaphor is…
Descriptors: Linguistic Theory, Morphology (Languages), Pragmatics, Semantics

Dowty, David – Language, 1991
Argues for the description of thematic roles as two-cluster concepts called Proto-Agent and Proto-Patient, each characterized by a set of verbal entailments. It is asserted that an argument of a verb may bear on either or both proto-roles to varying degrees, according to the number and kind of entailments provided by the verb. (133 references) (JL)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Linguistic Theory, Psycholinguistics, Semantics