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Comfy
Chris Collins, Don’t Go Bacon My Heart
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R741
R619
Discovery Miles 6 190
Save R122 (16%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Pre order now and make your comfort food dreams come true with
Comfy, the essential cookbook for simple, indulgent and joyful
dinners to make your heart sing. Creator of the renowned food blog
Don't Go Bacon My Heart, Chris Collins has curated a collection of
feel-good dinners that put flavour first, combining accessible
ingredients, straightforward methods and failproof cooking advice
for unforgettable meals every time. - Burrata Caprese Pasta -
Cottage Pie Baked Potatoes - Easy Bloomer Bread Pizza - Brown
Butter Gnocchi with Sage and Butternut Squash - Soul Soothing
Chicken Orzo Soup - Roasted Sweet Potato Salad with Poppy Seed
Dressing - Harissa Halloumi Skewers - Katsu Curry Including
everything from plates piled high with pasta and takeaway classics
reinvented for the home kitchen to set-and-forget slow-cooker
favourites and dinner-worthy soups and salads, this is year-round
food that you'll never want to stop cooking. The only book you need
to create cosy and delicious evenings for you, your family and your
friends.
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Enter the Metaverse - The Beginners Guide to Virtual Worlds - NFT Games, Play-to-Earn, GameFi, and Blockchain Entertainment such as Axie Infinity, Decentraland, The Sandbox, Meta, Gala, Gods Unchained, Bloktopia, and More! (Paperback)
Chris Collins
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R387
R317
Discovery Miles 3 170
Save R70 (18%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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One of the fundamental properties of human language is movement,
where a constituent moves from one position in a sentence to
another position. Syntactic theory has long been concerned with
properties of movement, including locality restrictions. Smuggling
in Syntax investigates how different movement operations interact
with one another, focusing on the special case of smuggling. First
introduced by volume editor Chris Collins in 2005, the term
'smuggling' refers to a specific type of movement interaction. The
contributions in this volume each describe different areas where
smuggling derivations play a role, including passives, causatives,
adverb placement, the dative alternation, the placement of measure
phrases, wh-in-situ, and word order in ergative languages. The
volume also addresses issues like the freezing constraint on
movement and the acquisition of smuggling derivations by children.
In this work, Adriana Belletti and Chris Collins bring together
leading syntacticians to present a range of contributions on
different aspects of smuggling. Tackling fundamental theoretical
questions with empirical consequences, this volume explores one of
the least understood types of movement and points the way toward
new research.
Any theory of grammar must contain a lexicon, an interface with
the mechanisms of production and perception (PF), and an interface
with the interpretational system of semantics (LF). A traditional
way to relate these three components in generative theory is
through a derivation. Noam Chomsky's Minimalist Program postulates
that grammatical derivations are constrained by economy conditions,
requiring that derivations be minimal. One of the most important
questions of syntax is what the economy conditions are and how they
operate.In Local Economy, Chris Collins proposes that economy
conditions are local. According to this theory, evaluating economy
conditions does not involve comparing whole derivations. Rather,
economy conditions are evaluated at each step in the derivation.
Collins shows that locative inversion and quotative inversion
provide strong arguments for local economy. In addition, he
explores the far-reaching consequences of this proposal for other
areas of syntax, including the strict cycle, binary branching,
successive cyclicity, and expletive constructions. He demonstrates
that local economy is superior to global economy on conceptual as
well as empirical grounds.Local Economy is one of the first books
other than Chomsky's The Minimalist Program (MIT, 1995) to deal in
a general way with economy of derivation and Minimalism.Linguistic
Inquiry Monograph No. 29
The linker introduces ("links") a variety of expressions into the
verb phrase, including locatives, the second object of a double
object construction, the second object of a causative, instruments,
subject matter arguments, and adverbs. This volume collects
together Chris Collins's published work on the linker in the
Khoisan languages. Here, Collins offers a systematic description of
the linker in Hoa, Ju|'hoan, N|uu, and to a lesser extent !Xoo and
|Xam. For each language, Collins illustrates various uses of the
linker, drawing attention to cross-linguistic generalizations as
well as to variation between the languages. The work presented in
this volume should be of interest to researchers working in a wide
variety of syntactic frameworks on different languages of the
world.
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