
Studies on Agreement
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Content
- Studies on Agreement
- Editorial page
- Title page
- LCC data
- Table of contents
- Introduction
- 1. The status of agreement
- 2. The theoretical status of agreement
- 2.1. Agreement and functional heads
- 2.2. Uninterpretable agreement and AGREE
- 2.3. The consequences of agreement
- 3. The problems
- Notes
- References
- Capeverdean DP-internal number agreement
- 1. Introduction
- 2. DP-internal number agreement
- 2.1. The data
- 2.2. Assumptions
- 2.3. A DM account for DP-internal number agreement in CV
- 3. A relation with verbal agreement
- 3.1. Strong V-feature of I and some parametric values
- 3.2. V-features and the licensing of pro
- 3.3. A relation of this with DP-internal number agreement
- 4. The quantifier tudu
- 5. Conclusions
- Notes
- References
- Nominal and verbal agreement in Portuguese
- Introduction
- 1. The facts
- 1.1. DP-internal number agreement
- 1.2. Subject-verb agreement
- 1.3. Summary
- 2. Proposal
- 3. Further predictions
- 4. Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Proleptic agreement as a good design property
- 1. Proleptic (`anticipatory') agreement and (im)perfection
- 2. Proleptic agreement as a systematic design property
- 3. Proleptic agreement as a cross-linguistic phenomenon
- 4. Predicate displacement within the adjective phrase: Evidence from Romanian
- 5. Predicate displacement within the Dutch adjectival phrase
- 6. Proleptic agreement
- 7. -e in non-agreeing contexts
- 8. Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Anti-agreement
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Agreement patterns in Hungarian
- 2.1. Agreement
- 2.2. Coordination and agreement
- 2.3. R-expressions and agreement
- 3. Agree and agreement
- 3.1. Agree in syntax
- 3.2. Agreement in morphology
- 4. Cyclicity in agreement
- 4.1. Phases
- 4.2. Spell-out domains as morphological units
- 4.3. Turkish possessives
- 5. Welsh
- 6. Movement-related anti-agreement phenomena
- 6.1. Local agreement only
- 6.2. Local anti-agreement only
- 7. Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- The acquisition of the standard EPP in Dutch and French
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Steps in the acquisition of the EPP
- 2.1. The early EPP
- 2.2. Early EPP and mode-implied subjects
- 3. The 4 EPP steps in Dutch and French
- 3.1. First step: I-marking and early EPP
- 3.2. I-marking precedes D-marking
- 3.3. Second step: D-marking and free anaphors
- 3.4. Third step: phi-oppositions on subject and dummy subjects
- 3.5. Fourth step: Agreement between subject and finite verb
- 4. Speed of acquisition and evidence frames
- 4.1. The EPP as evidence frame
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Appendix
- Number specification
- A new view on first conjunct agreement
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Assumptions
- 2.1. Features and feature checking
- 2.2. Case and agreement
- 2.3. Coordination
- 3. FCA versus FA: Data
- 3.1. Complementizer agreement
- 3.2. FCA and FA
- 3.3. Summary
- 4. FCA versus FA: An analysis
- 4.1. The absence of FCA in the verbal paradigm
- 4.2. The presence of FA in the verbal paradigm
- 4.3. The presence of FCA in the complementizer paradigm
- 4.4. FA in the complementizer paradigm
- 5. Summary & conclusions
- Notes
- References
- Agreement: The (unique and local) syntactic and morphological licenser of subject Case*
- 1. Introduction and summary
- 2. Basic facts: Correlation between overt agreement and subject Case in different types of clauses
- 2.1. Agreement in verbal clauses and its effects on subject Case
- 2.2. Nominalized argument clause types
- 2.3. Correlations between subject Case and Agr
- 3. Adjunct clauses
- 3.1. Subjunctive adjunct clauses
- 3.2. Indicative adjunct clauses (with Agr)
- 4. An account of subject Case
- 5. Default Case
- 6. Rival accounts
- 6.1. The external N-head hypothesis
- 6.2. Mood/Modality as expressed by Agr
- 7. An interesting minimal pair
- 8. Conclusions
- Notes
- References
- Probes
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The state of the art
- 2.1. Pre- and early minimalist accounts for the lack of agreement with postverbal subjects
- 2.2. The operation Agree
- 3. Applying the probe approach to our data
- 4. The problem of Case assignment
- 4.1. Defective T as a Case assigner?
- 4.2. Additional evidence: The personal infinitive construction
- 5. Conclusion and further remarks
- Notes
- References
- Primary sources
- Secondary sources
- Appendix
- Medieval Spanish
- Classical Spanish
- Medieval varieties of other Romance languages
- Modern Romance varieties
- Syntactic agreement across language modalities
- 1. Syntactic organization of ASL
- 1.1. Non-manual expressions of syntactic features over phrasal domains
- 1.2. Focus
- 1.3. Wh-movement
- 2. Agreement
- 2.1. Person distinctions
- 2.2. Number
- 2.3. Distribution of non-manual markings of subject and object agreement
- 3. Reanalysis of head tilt as marker of focus
- 3.1. Predicate focus
- 3.2. Interaction with wh-movement
- 3.3. Previous observations revisited
- 3.4. Research in progress
- 4. Conclusions
- Notes
- References
- On the relation of [gender] Agreement
- Introduction
- 1. The data
- 1.1. Friulian and standard Italian compared
- 1.2. Some reflections on agreement features
- 1.3. PtPPL agreement: A semantic or syntatcic phenomenon?
- 2. Theoretical claims
- 3. Tests with adverbials
- 3.1. Cinque's system and verb movement
- 3.2. Tests
- 3.3. An interpretation
- 4. Towards an account of PtPPL agreement
- 5. One type of agreement?
- Conclusions
- Notes
- References
- The (dis)association of Tense, phi-features EPP and nominative Case
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The distribution of inflected infinitives, na-clauses and personal infinitives
- 3. The proposal
- 3.1. Evidence from subject raising out of aspectual subjunctives and inflected infinitives
- 3.2. Evidence from subject raising out of passivised perception complements
- 3.3. Evidence from subject raising out of causative complements
- 3.4. A control case: Evidence from object raising out of complex adjectival constructions
- 3.5. Evidence from personal infinitives
- 4. Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Head-Level and Chain-Level constraints on spellout
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Clitic-Agreement Complementarity in Woolford (2003)
- 3. Clitic-Agreement Doubling
- 4. Clitic-Agreement Doubling in Menominee
- 5. Head-Level and Chain-Level constraints on Spellout
- 6. The 3rd-person restriction in Menominee
- 7. Selayarese revisited
- 8. A partial typology for cross-referencing
- 9. Summary
- Notes
- References
- Index
- The series Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today
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