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Uttering Trees (Paperback, New Ed)
Loot Price: R973
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Uttering Trees (Paperback, New Ed)
Series: Linguistic Inquiry Monographs, 56
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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A study of the interface between syntax and phonology that seeks
deeper explanations for such syntactic problems as case phenomena
and the distribution of overt and covert wh-movement. In Uttering
Trees, Norvin Richards investigates the conditions imposed upon
syntax by the need to create syntactic objects that can be
interpreted by phonolog-that is, objects that can be pronounced.
Drawing extensively on linguistic data from a variety of languages,
including Japanese, Basque, Tagalog, Spanish, Kinande (Bantu
language spoken in the Democratic Republic of the Congo), and Chaha
(Semitic language spoken in Ethiopia), Richards makes two new
proposals about the relationship between syntax and phonology. The
first, "Distinctness," has to do with the process of imposing a
linear order on the constituents of the tree. Richards claims that
syntactic nodes with many properties in common cannot be directly
linearized and must be kept structurally distant from each other.
He argues that a variety of syntactic phenomena can be explained by
this generalization, including much of what has traditionally been
covered by case theory. Richards's second proposal, "Beyond
Strength and Weakness," is an attempt to predict, for any given
language, whether that language will exhibit overt or covert
wh-movement. Richards argues that we can predict whether or not a
language can leave wh in situ by investigating more general
properties of its prosody. This proposal offers an explanation for
a cross-linguistic difference-that wh-phrases move overtly in some
languages and covertly in others-that has hitherto been simply
stipulated. In both these areas, it appears that syntax begins
constructing a phonological representation earlier than previously
thought; constraints on both word order and prosody begin at the
beginning of the derivation.
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