
This book presents new work on how Merge and formal features, two basic factors in the Minimalist Program, should determine the syntactic computation of natural language. Merge combines simpler objects into more complex ones. Formal features establish dependencies within objects. In this book leading scholars examine the intricate ways in which these two factors interact to generate well-formed derivations in natural language. It is divided into two parts concerned with formal features and interpretable features - a subset of formal features. The authors combine grammatical theory with the analysis of data drawn from a wide range of languages, both in the adult grammar and in first language acquisition. The mechanisms at work in linguistic computation are considered in relation to a variety of linguistic phenomena, including A-binding, A'-dependencies and reconstruction, agreement, word order, adjuncts, pronouns and complementizers.
This volume investigates how the interaction between Merge and formal features dictates the syntactic computation of natural language. The authors, Anna Gavarró, Jaume Solà, and José M. Brucart, utilize the framework of the Minimalist Program to analyze how these fundamental factors generate well-formed derivations. By examining both adult grammar and first language acquisition, the text provides a comprehensive look at the mechanisms underlying linguistic structure.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a specialized contribution to the Minimalist Program, suitable for advanced students and researchers in theoretical syntax. Readers frequently note the technical density of the prose, which requires a strong foundational knowledge of generative grammar to navigate effectively.
Page Count:
392
Publication Date:
2009-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191564699
ISBN-13:
9780191564697
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!