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The Passive in Japanese
A cartographic minimalist approach
-
Tomoko Ishizuka
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
2012
About this book
This book describes and analyzes the passive voice system in Japanese within the framework of generative grammar. By unifying different types of passives conventionally distinguished within the literature, the book advances a simple minimalist account where various passive characteristics emerge from the lexical properties of a single passive morpheme interacting with independently-supported syntactic principles and general properties of Japanese. The book both reevaluates numerous properties previously discussed within the literature and introduces interesting new data collected through experiments. This novel analysis also benefits from considering the important issue of interspeaker variability, in terms of grammaticality judgments and context requirements, and its implications for individual grammar. The book will be of interest not only to students and scholars working on passive constructions, but more generally to scholars working on generative grammar, experimental syntax, language acquisition, and sentence processing.
Reviews
Shin Fukuda, University of Hawaií at Manoa, in Linguistic Variation 15(2): 291-298:
The book makes an important contribution to our understanding of the morpheme -(r)are by presenting a thorough and careful examination of the relevant data that suggest that the empirical evidence for some widely-held assumptions about Japanese passive is not as strong as commonly assumed. It also makes an important theoretical contribution to the Minimalist Program framework, as it proposes and defends a unified analysis of the different types of sentences with -(r)are based on the smuggling approach to passivization...Any future work on -(r)are should pay close attention to what Ishizuka's careful examinination of the data shows and address the analytical issues that her analysis faces.
The book makes an important contribution to our understanding of the morpheme -(r)are by presenting a thorough and careful examination of the relevant data that suggest that the empirical evidence for some widely-held assumptions about Japanese passive is not as strong as commonly assumed. It also makes an important theoretical contribution to the Minimalist Program framework, as it proposes and defends a unified analysis of the different types of sentences with -(r)are based on the smuggling approach to passivization...Any future work on -(r)are should pay close attention to what Ishizuka's careful examinination of the data shows and address the analytical issues that her analysis faces.
Topics
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Prelim pages
i -
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Table of contents
v -
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List of tables
ix -
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Abbreviations
xi -
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Abstract
xiii -
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Acknowledgments
xv -
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1. Towards a unified theory of Japanese passives
1 -
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2. The passive morpheme -rare
25 -
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3. The derived subject in the passive
51 -
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4. Ni-passives, ni-yotte-passives, and short passives
119 -
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5. Revisiting the literature
135 -
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6. Further support for movement
165 -
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7. The extra-thematic passive
205 -
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8. Conclusions
231 -
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Bibliography
235 -
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Name index
245 -
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Subject index
247
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
August 22, 2012
eBook ISBN:
9789027273482
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
249
eBook ISBN:
9789027273482
Keywords for this book
Syntax; Generative linguistics; Theoretical linguistics; Japanese linguistics
Audience(s) for this book
Professional and scholarly;