Freshly Printed - allow 7 days lead
Couldn't load pickup availability
Word Order and Scrambling
Simin Karimi (Edited by), S Karimi (Author)
9780631233275, Wiley
Hardback, published 25 April 2003
410 pages
25.4 x 17.8 x 3.5 cm, 0.88 kg
"This collection provides thought-provoking material which will stimulate much future research. Perhaps the most fundamental question, addressed in the first six chapters, is the nature of the relation between scrambling and pragmatic features ... The issues raised in the book are important for any theory of syntax, language acquisition and/or the syntax-pragmatics interface." Linguistics "This volume represents well the depth and the scope of current research on scrambling. It illustrates the rich and diverse phenomena the term ‘scrambling’ covers and shows nicely that they provide a wealth of information for the development of linguistic theory." Mamoru Saito, Nanzan University "I highly recommend this volume to anyone interested in issues on word order, particularly issues related to the ‘free word order’ phenomena sometimes collectively called ‘scrambling’. The book is an impressive collection of papers over a wide range of topics on word order in a number of typologically diverse languages, viewed mainly from syntax and semantics, but also incorporating insights from language acquisition and brain imaging." Naoki Fukui, Sophia University
Word Order and Scrambling introduces readers to recent research into the linguistic phenomenon called scrambling and is a valuable contribution to the fields of theoretical linguistics, psycholinguistics, and applied linguistics.
Acknowledgments ix Notes on Contributors x Introduction by Simin Karimi xiii 1 Topic and Focus Scope Positions in Navajo 1 2 Argument Scrambling, Operator Movement, and Topic Movement in Hungarian 22 3 Grammatical Relations in Tohono O’odham: an Instrumental Perspective 44 4 Bare Nominals: Non-Specific and Contrastive Readings under Scrambling 67 5 On Object Positions, Specificity, and Scrambling in Persian 91 6 Scrambling, Subscrambling, and Case in Turkish 125 7 Does Russian Scrambling Exist? 156 8 A-Movement Scrambling and Options without Optionality 177 9 Scrambling in Dutch: Optionality and Optimality 201 10 Word Order and (Remnant) VP Movement 217 11 Non-Canonical Word Order: Topic and Focus in Adult and Child Tamil 238 12 L2 Acquisition of Japanese: Knowledge and Use of Case Particles in SOV and OSV Sentences 273 13 Scrambling and Processing: Dependencies, Complexity, and Constraints 301 14 WH-Movement versus Scrambling: the Brain Makes a Difference 325 References 345 Index 368
Kenneth Hale, Eloise Jelinek, and MaryAnn Willie
Katalin E. Kiss
Mizuki Miyashita, Richard Demers, and Delbert Ortiz
Veneeta Dayal
Simin Karimi
Jaklin Kornfilt
John Frederick Bailyn
Shigeru Miyagawa
Helen de Hoop
Anoop Mahajan
Vaijayanthi Sarma
Noriko Iwasaki
Irina A. Sekerina
Angela D. Friederici, Matthias Schlesewsky, and Christian J. Fiebach
Subject Areas: Language teaching & learning [other than ELT CJ]
