Bültmann & Gerriets
The Verbal Domain
von Roberta D'Alessandro, Irene Franco, Angel J. Gallego
Verlag: Oxford University Press
Reihe: Oxford Studies in Theoretical
Gebundene Ausgabe
ISBN: 978-0-19-876788-6
Erschienen am 30.05.2017
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 242 mm [H] x 161 mm [B] x 30 mm [T]
Gewicht: 644 Gramm
Umfang: 352 Seiten

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Klappentext
Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis

This volume features cutting-edge research from leading authorities on the nature and structure of the verbal domain and the complexity of the Verb Phrase. Its three parts represent the areas in which contemporary debate on the verbal domain is most active.



Roberta D'Alessandro is Professor at the Utrecht Institute of Linguistics OTS, and Chair of Syntax and Language Variation at the same university; she is also an external member of the Centre de Lingüística Teòrica of the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona. She specializes in syntactic microvariation in Italo-Romance, the syntax-PF interface, and syntactic change in contact. She is co-editor of the Open Generative Grammar series published by Language Science Press, and editor-in-chief of Brill's Grammars and Sketches of the World's Languages/Romance series.
Irene Franco is a Post-doctoral Fellow in the Faculty of Romance Languages and Literature at Goethe Universität Frankfurt, and is currently working on a project on quantification in Old Italian. Her main research interests are morphosyntactic diachronic change and variation, as well as comparative (Germanic-Romance) syntax. Her work has appeared in Isogloss, Rivista di Grammatica Generativa, and MIT Working Papers, and in edited volumes from OUP and John Benjamins.
Ángel J. Gallego is Professor Agregat at the Departamento de Filologia Espanyola of the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona and a member of the Centre de Lingüística Teòrica. His principal research interests and publications are in the areas of formal syntax and parametric variation (especially within Romance languages). He has published in journals such as Natural Language and Linguistic Theory, Probus, and Theoretical Linguistics, and he is the author of Phase Theory (John Benjamins, 2010), and the editor of Phases. Developing the Framework (Mouton de Gruyter, 2012).



  • Introduction: The verbal domain

  • Part I: Root and Verbalizer

  • 1: Heidi Harley: The "bundling" hypothesis and the disparate functions of little v

  • 2: Phoevos Panagiotidis, Vassilios Spyropoulos, and Anthi Revithiadou: Little v as a categorizing verbal head: Evidence from Greek

  • 3: Maria Polinsky, Nina Radkevich, and Marina Chumakina: Agreement between arguments? Not really

  • 4: Artemis Alexiadou and Terje Lohndal: On the division of labor between roots and functional structure

  • Part II: Voice

  • 5: Elena Anagnostopoulou: Voice, manners, and results in adjectival passives

  • 6: Florian Schäfer: Romance and Greek medio-passives and the typology of Voice

  • 7: Sandhya Sundaresan and Thomas McFadden: The articulated v layer: Evidence from Tamil

  • 8: Susi Wurmbrand and Koji Shimamura: The features of the voice domain: Actives, passives, and restructuring

  • Part III: Event and Argument Structure

  • 9: Balk¿z Öztürk and Eser Erguvanl¿ Taylan: Omnipresent little v in Pazar Laz

  • 10: Gillian Ramchand: The event domain

  • 11: Jim Wood and Alec Marantz: The interpretation of external arguments

  • References


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