Abstract
The status of the expression a gente (lit. the people) in European Portuguese is the topic of this paper. We revisit its classical analysis, treating it as a pronoun, and the explanation for the patterns of agreement it may trigger on the inflected verb. In particular, the paper addresses Taylor's (2009) argument against the pronominal status of a gente, and argues that it can be analyzed as a regular DP. We compare a gente with other pronouns, showing that there are more robust regularities than those described in Taylor's arguments, but adopt part of his analysis to accommodate the variable status of agreement patterns under a phase-based approach.
©[2013] by Walter de Gruyter Berlin Boston
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Masthead
- a gente: pronominal status and agreement revisited
- Prosodically constrained non-local doubling
- A typology of intermediate phonological relationships
- A new approach to prosodic grouping
- A unified account of consonant gemination in external sandhi in Italian: Raddoppiamento Sintattico and related phenomena
- σ strikes back: A defense of headedness and constituency in phonology
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Masthead
- a gente: pronominal status and agreement revisited
- Prosodically constrained non-local doubling
- A typology of intermediate phonological relationships
- A new approach to prosodic grouping
- A unified account of consonant gemination in external sandhi in Italian: Raddoppiamento Sintattico and related phenomena
- σ strikes back: A defense of headedness and constituency in phonology