Continuity and Variation in Germanic and Romance
 
A termék adatai:

ISBN13:9780198841166
ISBN10:0198841167
Kötéstípus:Keménykötés
Terjedelem:624 oldal
Méret:240x157x38 mm
Súly:1068 g
Nyelv:angol
405
Témakör:

Continuity and Variation in Germanic and Romance

 
Kiadó: OUP Oxford
Megjelenés dátuma:
 
Normál ár:

Kiadói listaár:
GBP 120.00
Becsült forint ár:
57 960 Ft (55 200 Ft + 5% áfa)
Miért becsült?
 
Az Ön ára:

46 368 (44 160 Ft + 5% áfa )
Kedvezmény(ek): 20% (kb. 11 592 Ft)
A kedvezmény érvényes eddig: 2024. június 30.
A kedvezmény csak az 'Értesítés a kedvenc témákról' hírlevelünk címzettjeinek rendeléseire érvényes.
Kattintson ide a feliratkozáshoz
 
Beszerezhetőség:

Becsült beszerzési idő: A Prosperónál jelenleg nincsen raktáron, de a kiadónál igen. Beszerzés kb. 3-5 hét..
A Prosperónál jelenleg nincsen raktáron.
Nem tudnak pontosabbat?
 
  példányt

 
Rövid leírás:

This volume offers a range of synchronic and diachronic case studies in comparative Germanic and Romance morphosyntax. The contributors adopt a diverse range of approaches, making use of the latest digitized corpora and presenting a mixture of well-known and under-studied data from standard and non-standard Germanic and Romance languages.

Hosszú leírás:
This volume offers a range of synchronic and diachronic case studies in comparative Germanic and Romance morphosyntax. These two language families, spoken by over a billion people today, have played a central role in linguistic research, but many significant questions remain about the relationship between them. Following an introduction that sets out the methodological, empirical, and theoretical background to the book, the volume is divided into three parts that deal with the morphosyntax of subjects and the inflectional layer; inversion, discourse pragmatics, and the left periphery; and continuity and variation beyond the clause. The contributors adopt a diverse range of approaches, making use of the latest digitized corpora and presenting a mixture of well-known and under-studied data from standard and non-standard Germanic and Romance languages. Many of the chapters challenge received wisdom about the relationship between these two important language families. The volume will be an indispensable resource for researchers and students in the fields of Germanic and Romance linguistics, historical and comparative linguistics, and morphosyntax.

One must hope that more scholars from a diversity of theoretical backgrounds will follow the example of this volume and undertake comparable analyses of continuity, variation and contrast at the level of two or three families: these studies prove, if needed, that combining variational and contrastive stances is a highly productive way to deconstruct crucial syntactic phenomena that are too often taken for granted.
Tartalomjegyzék:
List of abbreviations
The contributors
Germanic and Romance: Data, method, and theory
Register-specific subject omission in English and French and the syntax of coordination
The position of subjects in Germanic and Romance questions
Expressing perception in parallel ways: Sentential Small Clauses in German and Romance
Pro-drop in interrogatives across older Germanic and Romance languages
Reflexive constructions in German, Spanish, and French as a product of cyclic interaction
Locative inversion in Germanic and Romance: A conspiracy theory
V2 and topicalization in Germanic and Romance
Topics in French and Norwegian
Issues in the left periphery of Old French and Old English: Topic types and the V2 constraint
Evaluating the contact hypothesis for Old French word order
Second positions: A synchronic analysis and some diachronic consequences
Deconstructing stylistic fronting in Old Norwegian and Old Spanish
The grammaticalization of sic: On narrative particles in Romance and Scandinavian
Against complementizers
On complementizers and relative pronouns in Germanic vs Romance
Adjectival concord in Romance and Germanic
Functional and lexical prepositions across Germanic and Romance
Locative prepositions in the house
'Have' in English and Romance
References
Index