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The Syntax of German

A broad coverage of German syntax, providing an in-depth look at object-verb sentence formation in comparison with other languages.

Hubert Haider (Author)

9780521865258, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 7 January 2010

386 pages
23.4 x 15.6 x 2.2 cm, 0.74 kg

What do you know, if you know that a language has 'Object Verb' structure rather than 'Verb Object'? Answering this question and many others, this book provides an essential guide to the syntactic structure of German. It examines the systematic differences between German and English, which follow from this basic difference in sentence structure, and presents the main results of syntactic research on German. Topics covered include the strict word order in VO vs word order variation in OV, verb clustering, clause union effects, obligatory functional subject position, and subject-object asymmetries for extractions. Through this, a cross-model and cross-linguistic comparison evolves, highlighting the immediate implications for non-Germanic OV languages, and creating a detailed and comprehensive description of the syntactic differences that immediately follow from an OV type in contrast with a VO type like English. It will be of interest to all those interested in syntax and Germanic languages.

Foreword
Abbreviations
List of tables and figures
1. A comparative survey: German – V2 and partially 'OV'
2. The functional architecture of a German clause – facts and controversies
3. Targeting the clause initial position - German wh-constructions
4. Targeting left: clause internal word order and word order variation
5. Targeting the right edge – extraposition
6. Case: a nominative-accusative language with a four way case paradigm
7. Non-finite verbs and their constructions
References.

Subject Areas: Historical & comparative linguistics [CFF]

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