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o. COMPARATIVE GERMANIC SYNTAX This volume contains 13 papers that
were prepared for the Seventh Workshop on Comparative Germanie
Syntax at the University of Stuttgart in November 1991. In defining
the theme both of the workshop and of this volume, we have taken
"comparative" in "comparative Germanic syntax" to mean that at
least two languages should be analyzed and "Germanic" to mean that
at least one of these languages should be Germanic. There was no
require ment as such that the research presented should be situated
within the framework known as Principles and Parameters Theory
(previously known as Government and Binding Theory), though it
probably is no accident that this nevertheless turned out to be the
case. Within this theory, it is seen as highly desirable to be able
to account for several differences on the surface by deriving them
from fewer under lying differences. The reason is that, in order to
explain the ease with which children acquire language, it is
assumed that not all knowledge of any given language is the result
of learning, but that instead children already possess part of this
knowledge at birth (the innate part of linguistic knowledge will
obviously be the same for all human beings, and thus this theory
also provides an explanation of language universals). The fewer
"real" (i.e."
This study presents an account of object shift, a word order
phenomenon found in most of the Scandinavian languages where an
object occurs unexpectedly to the left and not to the right of a
sentential adverbial. The book examines object shift across many of
the Scandinavian languages and dialects, and analyses the
variation, for example whether object shift is optional or
obligatory, whether it applies only to pronouns or other objects as
well, and whether it applies to adverbials. The authors show that
optimality theory, traditionally used in phonology, is a useful
framework for accounting for the variation as well as the
interaction of object shift with other syntactic constructions such
as verb second, other verb movements, double object constructions,
particle verbs and causative verbs. The book moves on to
investigate the interaction with remnant VP-topicalisation in great
detail. With new and original observations, this book is an
important addition to the fields of phonology, optimality theory
and theoretical syntax.
o. COMPARATIVE GERMANIC SYNTAX This volume contains 13 papers that
were prepared for the Seventh Workshop on Comparative Germanie
Syntax at the University of Stuttgart in November 1991. In defining
the theme both of the workshop and of this volume, we have taken
"comparative" in "comparative Germanic syntax" to mean that at
least two languages should be analyzed and "Germanic" to mean that
at least one of these languages should be Germanic. There was no
require ment as such that the research presented should be situated
within the framework known as Principles and Parameters Theory
(previously known as Government and Binding Theory), though it
probably is no accident that this nevertheless turned out to be the
case. Within this theory, it is seen as highly desirable to be able
to account for several differences on the surface by deriving them
from fewer under lying differences. The reason is that, in order to
explain the ease with which children acquire language, it is
assumed that not all knowledge of any given language is the result
of learning, but that instead children already possess part of this
knowledge at birth (the innate part of linguistic knowledge will
obviously be the same for all human beings, and thus this theory
also provides an explanation of language universals). The fewer
"real" (i.e."
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