
Particles and Projections in Irish Syntax
N. Duffield(Author)
Kluwer Academic Publishers
Published on 15. March 1996
Book
Paperback/Softback
XIV, 372 pages
978-0-7923-3674-7 (ISBN)
Description
Chapter 5: Irish Noun Phrases ...266 5. 0 Introduction 266 5. 0. 1 Irish Nominal Paradigms...269 5. 0. 2 Prepositional Phrases: Two Types of Mutation Context ...273 5. 1 Construct State Nominals and DP Projections...282 5. 1. 1 Rightward Specifiers 286 5. 1. 2 Adjective Placement...288 5. 1. 3 Possessive Particles 305 5. 1. 4 Demonstrative Licensing and Interpretation...311 5. 1. 5 Head-movement and ICM Effects 315 5. 2 Summary 322 Appendix ...323 References 342 Index of Names and Subjects 359 PREFACE This bookis based on my 1991 USCdissertation. Since thattime, there have been two major theoretical developments that bear directly on the analysesoriginallydevelopedin the dissertation. These aretheinceptionof the 'Minimalist Program' of Chomsky (1992, 1993), and the recent 'Antisymmetry' proposals presented in Kayne (1993). Taken in conjunction with the many criticisms and suggestions ofreviewers, these proposals have prompted significant revisions ofthe earlier work:. Every chapter has been substantially revised, the introductory chapter has been replaced, and Chapters 2, 3 and 5 offer completely new analyses of the originalmaterial.
The book comprises a set of theoretical studies of aspects of Modern Irish syntax. I have tried to present a coherent and consistent treatmentof the Irishfacts; abookin which the particularsofIrish syntax- which are in many cases quiteeccentric from an Englishperspective- are shown to inform more general theoreticalissues. I also hope to have offered to the non-Celticist a reasonably complete overview of the major syntactic structures ofIrish, with some indication and analysisofthe more importantdialectdifferences.
The book comprises a set of theoretical studies of aspects of Modern Irish syntax. I have tried to present a coherent and consistent treatmentof the Irishfacts; abookin which the particularsofIrish syntax- which are in many cases quiteeccentric from an Englishperspective- are shown to inform more general theoreticalissues. I also hope to have offered to the non-Celticist a reasonably complete overview of the major syntactic structures ofIrish, with some indication and analysisofthe more importantdialectdifferences.
More details
Series
Edition
Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1995
Language
English
Place of publication
Dordrecht
Netherlands
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Research
Illustrations
XIV, 372 p.
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 155 mm
Thickness: 22 mm
Weight
593 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-7923-3674-7 (9780792336747)
DOI
10.1007/978-94-011-0155-4
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

N. Duffield
Particles and Projections in Irish Syntax
E-Book
12/2012
Springer
€96.29
Available for download

N. Duffield
Particles and Projections in Irish Syntax
Book
08/1995
Kluwer Academic Publishers
€106.99
Shipment within 15-20 days
Content
1: Theoretical Issues.- 1.1 Explaining Syntactic Universals and Syntactic Variation.- 1.2 Constraints on Phrase-Structure.- 1.3 Conditions on Movement: Deriving Locality.- 1.4 Motivating Syntactic Movement.- 1.5 Summary.- 2: Movement and Mutation Processes In Modern Irish.- 2.0 Introduction.- 2.1 The Scope of Verb-Movement in Irish.- 2.2 Unpacking INFL: The Preverbal Particle System.- 2.3 Mutation in Copular Constructions.- 2.4 Summary.- 3: Conspicuous Absences: Mutation & Extraction In Negated Contexts.- 3.0 Introduction.- 3.1 The Problem of Gan: Mutation And Extraction.- 3.2 Relative Clauses, Narrative Fronting and Topicalization in Irish.- 3.3 Conclusion.- 4: Visible Arguments: Theta-Government And Case In Ulster Irish.- 4.0 Introduction.- 4.1 Deriving SOVX word order.- 4.2 Theta-marking and Extraction in Progressive Contexts.- 4.3 Non-Finite Word-Order and Object Agreement in Southern Dialects.- 4.4 Summary.- 5: Irish Noun Phrases.- 5.0 Introduction.- 5.1 Construct State Nominals and DP Projections.- 5.2 Summary.- References.- Index of Names and Subjects.