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By comparing linguistic varieties that are quite similar overall,
linguists can often determine where and how grammatical systems
differ, and how they change over time. Micro-Syntactic Variation in
North American English provides a systematic look at minimal
differences in the syntax of varieties of English spoken in North
America. The book makes available for the first time a range of
data on unfamiliar constructions drawn from several regional and
social dialects, data whose distribution and grammatical properties
shed light on the varieties under examination and on the properties
of English syntax more generally. The nine contributions collected
in this volume fall under a number of overlapping topics: variation
in the expression of negation and modality (the "so don't I "
construction in eastern New England, negative auxiliary inversion
in declaratives in African-American and southern white English,
multiple modals in southern speech, the "needs washed "
construction in the Pittsburgh area); pronouns and reflexives
(transitive expletives in Appalachia, personal dative constructions
in the Southern/Mountain states, long-distance reflexives in the
Minnesota Iron Range); and the relation between linguistic
variation and language change (the rise of "drama SO " among
younger speakers, the difficulty in establishing which phenomena
cluster together and should be explained by a single point of
parametric variation). These chapters delve into the syntactic
analysis of individual phenomena, and the editors' introduction and
afterword contextualize the issues and explore their semantic,
pragmatic, and sociolinguistic implications.
Presenting cutting-edge research in syntax and semantics, this
important volume furthers theoretical claims in generative
linguistics and represents a significant addition to present
scholarship in the field. Leading scholars present crosslinguistic
studies dealing with clausal architecture, negation, and tense and
aspect, and the issue of whether a statistical model can by itself
capture the richness of human linguistic abilities. Taken together,
these contributions elegantly show how theoretical tools can propel
our understanding of language beyond pretheoretical descriptions,
especially when combined with the insight and skills of linguists
who can analyze difficult and complex data. "Crosslinguistic
Research in Syntax and Semantics" covers a range of topics
currently at the center of lively debate in the linguistic
literature, such as the structure of the left periphery of the
clause, the proper treatment of negative polarity items, and the
role of statistical learning in building a model of linguistic
competence. The ten original contributions offer an excellent
balance of novel empirical description and theoretical analysis,
applied to a wide range of languages, including Dutch, German,
Irish English, Italian, Malagasy, Malay, and a number of medieval
Romance languages. Scholars and students of semantics, syntax, and
linguistic theory will find it to be a valuable resource for
ongoing scholarship and advanced study.
By comparing linguistic varieties that are quite similar overall,
linguists can often determine where and how grammatical systems
differ, and how they change over time. Micro-Syntactic Variation in
North American English provides a systematic look at minimal
differences in the syntax of varieties of English spoken in North
America. The book makes available for the first time a range of
data on unfamiliar constructions drawn from several regional and
social dialects, data whose distribution and grammatical properties
shed light on the varieties under examination and on the properties
of English syntax more generally. The nine contributions collected
in this volume fall under a number of overlapping topics: variation
in the expression of negation and modality (the "so don't I "
construction in eastern New England, negative auxiliary inversion
in declaratives in African-American and southern white English,
multiple modals in southern speech, the "needs washed "
construction in the Pittsburgh area); pronouns and reflexives
(transitive expletives in Appalachia, personal dative constructions
in the Southern/Mountain states, long-distance reflexives in the
Minnesota Iron Range); and the relation between linguistic
variation and language change (the rise of "drama SO " among
younger speakers, the difficulty in establishing which phenomena
cluster together and should be explained by a single point of
parametric variation). These chapters delve into the syntactic
analysis of individual phenomena, and the editors' introduction and
afterword contextualize the issues and explore their semantic,
pragmatic, and sociolinguistic implications.
Every human language has some syntactic means of distinguishing a
negative from a non-negative sentence; in other words, every
speaker's syntactic competence provides a means to express
sentential negation. This ability, however, may be expressed in
different ways, as shown by the fact that individual languages
employ different syntactic strategies for the expression of the
same semantic function of negating a sentence.
Zanuttini's goal here is to characterize the range of such
variation by comparing the different syntactic means for expressing
sentential negation exhibited by the members of one language
family--the Romance languages--and by reducing the differences we
witness to a constrained set of choices available to the particular
grammars of these languages. This sort of analysis is a first step
towards the ultimate goal of determining and understanding what
limits there are on the syntactic options that universal grammar
imposes on the expression of sentential negation.
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