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Recent years have witnessed a (re)surfacing of interest on the
interaction of morphology and syntax. For many grammatical
phenomena, it is not easy to draw a dividing line between syntactic
and morphological structure. This has led to the assumption that
syntax is the module responsible not only for deriving
syntactically complex phrases but also for deriving morphologically
complex items, both in inflection and word formation. There are
however also good reasons to think that syntax is not involved in
all morphological processes and that there are consistent areas of
morphology that are independent from syntactic processes. This book
presents a collection of papers where phenomena from Romance
languages and varieties are analysed under contrasting views on how
morphology and syntax interact. All the contributions follow the
aim to investigate what the analysed phenomena tell us about their
structural make-up and the grammatical processes involved.
This collective volume contains a selection of research
contributions, presented at the 30th Deutscher Romanistentag
[German Conference on Romance languages and literatures] in 2007 in
Vienna in the section "Mood and Modality in Romance". The Romance
languages studied here include Portuguese, Italian, Spanish,
Romanian, Catalan and French. All contributions thematically
explore the status and importance of modality and mood and their
reciprocal relationships with reference to theoretical approaches.
Recent years have witnessed a (re)surfacing of interest on the
interaction of morphology and syntax. For many grammatical
phenomena, it is not easy to draw a dividing line between syntactic
and morphological structure. This has led to the assumption that
syntax is the module responsible not only for deriving
syntactically complex phrases but also for deriving morphologically
complex items, both in inflection and word formation. There are
however also good reasons to think that syntax is not involved in
all morphological processes and that there are consistent areas of
morphology that are independent from syntactic processes. This book
presents a collection of papers where phenomena from Romance
languages and varieties are analysed under contrasting views on how
morphology and syntax interact. All the contributions follow the
aim to investigate what the analysed phenomena tell us about their
structural make-up and the grammatical processes involved.
This study is an application of Chomsky's minimalist program (1995)
to the universally relevant phenomenon of auxiliarity, restricted
here to verb auxiliarity. It provides detailed minimalist analyses
of auxiliary verb constructions in two Romance languages (Italian
and Sardinian). The theoretical framework is supplied by Generative
Grammar, and in the course of the book a number of modifications to
this framework are proposed. Approaches based on grammaticalization
theory also play a role in the analysis and interpretation of
auxiliary verbs.
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