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Portuguese is the second most spoken Romance language in the world,
and due to recent interest in comparative syntax, the literature on
its syntax has increased exponentially, resulting in exciting
discoveries of a range of aspects that have hitherto been
overlooked. This book provides a theoretically grounded overview of
the major syntactic properties of Portuguese, focusing on the
differences between European and Brazilian Portuguese. It shows
from a theoretical point of view how different syntactic properties
are interconnected by comparing and contrasting the variances
between pronominal and agreement systems, null subjects, null
complements, and word order. It also highlights how small
differences in the specification of syntactic properties may yield
quite different dialects. It introduces key theoretical points
without technical jargon, making the content accessible to
specialist and non-specialists alike. It is essential reading for
both academic researchers and students of Portuguese language,
comparative syntax, Romance linguistics, and theoretical syntax.
This volume explores word order change within the framework of
diachronic generative syntax. Word order is at the core of natural
language grammatical systems, linking syntax with prosody and with
semantics and pragmatics. The chapters in this volume use the tools
provided by the generative theory of grammar to examine the
constrained ways in which historical word order variants have given
way to new ones over time. Following an introduction by the
editors, the book is divided into four parts that investigate
changes regarding the targets for movement within the clausal
functional hierarchy; changes (or stability) in the nature of the
triggers for movement; verb movement into the left peripheries; and
types of movement, with specific focus on word order change in
Latin. Data are drawn from a wide variety of languages from
different families and from both classical and modern periods,
including Sanskrit, Tocharian, Italian, Portuguese, Dutch, Irish,
Hungarian, and Coptic Egyptian. The book's broad coverage and
combination of language-internal and comparative studies offers new
perspectives on the relation between word order change and
syntactic movement. The volume also provides a range of wider
insights into the properties of natural language and the way in
which those properties constrain language variation and change.
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