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Notes on Phase Extension
-
Robert Frank
Veröffentlicht/Copyright:
27. August 2007
Abstract
1. The ingredients of locality
Since the early 1960s, one of the major goals of work in generative syntax has been to explain the locality properties of syntactic dependencies. Current accounts in the Minimalist framework derive locality from two basic notions. First, the syntactic relations that give rise to agreement and displacement are subjected to the Minimal Link Condition, which stipulates that such relations can obtain only in the absence of relevant intevening elements.
Published Online: 2007-08-27
Published in Print: 2007-06-19
© Walter de Gruyter
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Artikel in diesem Heft
- Phase Extension Contours of a theory of the role of head movement in phrasal extraction
- Phases and Explanatory Adequacy: Contrasting two programs
- Notes on Phase Extension
- A critique of Phase Extension, with a comparison to Phase Sliding
- Extended phases & beheaded phrases Comments on Marcel den Dikken's ‘Phase Extension’
- Some thoughts on Phase Extension to a single interface
- Predication and escape hatches in Phase Extension Theory
- Property Delay (Remarks on “Phase Extension” by Marcel den Dikken)
- On Phase Extension and head movement
- Phase Extension: A reply
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Phase Extension Contours of a theory of the role of head movement in phrasal extraction
- Phases and Explanatory Adequacy: Contrasting two programs
- Notes on Phase Extension
- A critique of Phase Extension, with a comparison to Phase Sliding
- Extended phases & beheaded phrases Comments on Marcel den Dikken's ‘Phase Extension’
- Some thoughts on Phase Extension to a single interface
- Predication and escape hatches in Phase Extension Theory
- Property Delay (Remarks on “Phase Extension” by Marcel den Dikken)
- On Phase Extension and head movement
- Phase Extension: A reply