Chapter 7. Micro‑ and macro-variation
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Maria Rita Manzini
Abstract
Manzini and Savoia (2005, 2017) argue that morphophonology is involved in enclisis/proclisis alternations only in so far as it externalizes the syntactico-semantic category of non-veridicality, as outlined here in Section 1. In Section 2 we review typological literature reporting that the irrealis category governs the alternation between different pronominal series cross-linguistically. This evidence potentially fulfills a prediction issuing from the treatment of Romance. What is more, comparison between treatments of Romance microvariation and of typological macrovariation reveals a propensity to treat the former in terms of morphophonological organization and the latter in terms of conceptual systems. If Manzini and Savoia are correct, efforts at defining opposed notions of macro‑ and micro-parametrization are not warranted by the evidence (Section 3).
Abstract
Manzini and Savoia (2005, 2017) argue that morphophonology is involved in enclisis/proclisis alternations only in so far as it externalizes the syntactico-semantic category of non-veridicality, as outlined here in Section 1. In Section 2 we review typological literature reporting that the irrealis category governs the alternation between different pronominal series cross-linguistically. This evidence potentially fulfills a prediction issuing from the treatment of Romance. What is more, comparison between treatments of Romance microvariation and of typological macrovariation reveals a propensity to treat the former in terms of morphophonological organization and the latter in terms of conceptual systems. If Manzini and Savoia are correct, efforts at defining opposed notions of macro‑ and micro-parametrization are not warranted by the evidence (Section 3).
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Chapter 1. Introduction: Structuring thought, externalizing structure 1
-
Part I. Micro‑ and macro-variation in syntax
- Chapter 2. Gender, number and inflectional class in some Northern Italian dialects 31
- Chapter 3. Objects and subjects in the left periphery 57
- Chapter 4. Notes on infinitival relatives in Italian 73
- Chapter 5. Negation and negative copulas in Bantu 85
- Chapter 6. On gender and number 97
- Chapter 7. Micro‑ and macro-variation 111
- Chapter 8. Concealed pseudo-clefts? Evidence from a Lombard dialect 121
- Chapter 9. Negation patterns across dialects 133
- Chapter 10. A note on left-peripheral maps and interface properties 149
- Chapter 11. Italian faire -infinitives 161
- Chapter 12. Optional vs obligatory movement in Albanian (pseudo)-raising constructions 177
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Part II. Clitics and pronouns from a theoretical perspective
- Chapter 13. Clitic stress allomorphy in Sardinian 195
- Chapter 14. Clitics and vowel epenthesis 215
- Chapter 15. Overabundance in Hungarian accusative pronouns 223
- Chapter 16. Unstable personal pronouns in Northern Logudorese 241
- Chapter 17. Object clitics for subject clitics in Francoprovençal and Piedmontese 257
-
Part III. Sound pattern and syntactic structure
- Chapter 18. Are Sardinian vocatives perfectly regular? 271
- Chapter 19. Phonological correlates of syntactic structure 283
- Chapter 20. Metaphony as magnetism 297
- Chapter 21. Some reflections on the syllabification of clusters 307
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Part IV. Language in context
- Chapter 22. Diachronic and synchronic lexical interactions in the Italo-Balkan linguistic space 323
- Chapter 23. Lexical-semantic analysis of the political language 337
- Chapter 24. Dialects and neuroscience 351
- Chapter 25. Remarks on the vulnerability of grammar 365
- Chapter 26. Some Celto-Albanian isoglosses and their implications 379
- Subject index 391
- Language index 393
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Chapter 1. Introduction: Structuring thought, externalizing structure 1
-
Part I. Micro‑ and macro-variation in syntax
- Chapter 2. Gender, number and inflectional class in some Northern Italian dialects 31
- Chapter 3. Objects and subjects in the left periphery 57
- Chapter 4. Notes on infinitival relatives in Italian 73
- Chapter 5. Negation and negative copulas in Bantu 85
- Chapter 6. On gender and number 97
- Chapter 7. Micro‑ and macro-variation 111
- Chapter 8. Concealed pseudo-clefts? Evidence from a Lombard dialect 121
- Chapter 9. Negation patterns across dialects 133
- Chapter 10. A note on left-peripheral maps and interface properties 149
- Chapter 11. Italian faire -infinitives 161
- Chapter 12. Optional vs obligatory movement in Albanian (pseudo)-raising constructions 177
-
Part II. Clitics and pronouns from a theoretical perspective
- Chapter 13. Clitic stress allomorphy in Sardinian 195
- Chapter 14. Clitics and vowel epenthesis 215
- Chapter 15. Overabundance in Hungarian accusative pronouns 223
- Chapter 16. Unstable personal pronouns in Northern Logudorese 241
- Chapter 17. Object clitics for subject clitics in Francoprovençal and Piedmontese 257
-
Part III. Sound pattern and syntactic structure
- Chapter 18. Are Sardinian vocatives perfectly regular? 271
- Chapter 19. Phonological correlates of syntactic structure 283
- Chapter 20. Metaphony as magnetism 297
- Chapter 21. Some reflections on the syllabification of clusters 307
-
Part IV. Language in context
- Chapter 22. Diachronic and synchronic lexical interactions in the Italo-Balkan linguistic space 323
- Chapter 23. Lexical-semantic analysis of the political language 337
- Chapter 24. Dialects and neuroscience 351
- Chapter 25. Remarks on the vulnerability of grammar 365
- Chapter 26. Some Celto-Albanian isoglosses and their implications 379
- Subject index 391
- Language index 393