
Coordination in Syntax
by Niina Ning ZhangBuy New
Rent Textbook
Used Textbook
We're Sorry
Sold Out
eTextbook
We're Sorry
Not Available
How Marketplace Works:
- This item is offered by an independent seller and not shipped from our warehouse
- Item details like edition and cover design may differ from our description; see seller's comments before ordering.
- Sellers much confirm and ship within two business days; otherwise, the order will be cancelled and refunded.
- Marketplace purchases cannot be returned to eCampus.com. Contact the seller directly for inquiries; if no response within two days, contact customer service.
- Additional shipping costs apply to Marketplace purchases. Review shipping costs at checkout.
Summary
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments | p. xvi |
Abbreviations | p. xviii |
Introduction | p. 1 |
No Special Syntactic Configuration | p. 7 |
The complementation structure of coordinate complexes | p. 9 |
Introduction | p. 9 |
The binary-branching constituency of coordinate complexes | p. 10 |
The asymmetry between conjuncts in binding | p. 11 |
The asymmetry between conjuncts in possessee pronominalization | p. 12 |
The asymmetry between conjuncts in hosting coordinators | p. 13 |
The asymmetry between conjuncts in coordinator floating | p. 14 |
Conclusion and Dik's challenges | p. 16 |
The complementation structure of coordinate complexes | p. 19 |
The dubious status of agreement in the syntax of coordination | p. 21 |
The impossibility for external conjuncts to be stranded | p. 21 |
The possible interactions between coordinators and internal conjuncts | p. 26 |
Extraction from both internal and external conjuncts | p. 30 |
The syntactic relation between conjuncts: conclusions | p. 31 |
The possible modifier function of conjuncts | p. 33 |
The issue of so-called bar-level sharing | p. 35 |
Chapter summary | p. 40 |
No Special Syntactic Category | p. 41 |
The categorial makeup of coordinate complexes | p. 43 |
Introduction | p. 43 |
The categories of coordinators and conjuncts | p. 44 |
Coordinators without c-selection restrictions | p. 45 |
Coordinators with c-selection restrictions | p. 46 |
Representing the categorial dependency of coordinators on conjuncts | p. 49 |
The categorial makeup of coordinate complexes | p. 50 |
Coordinate complexes headed by and-like coordinators | p. 50 |
Categorial features of coordinators that have c-selection restrictions | p. 57 |
Categorial unification in Spec-Head and Head-Complrelations | p. 59 |
Against &P | p. 60 |
The distributions of coordinate complexes are covered by simplexes | p. 61 |
Neither closed classes nor case inflection argue for &P | p. 63 |
Retrospection | p. 64 |
Against the Clausal Conjunct Hypothesis | p. 65 |
The structure of coordinate complexes composed of more than two conjuncts | p. 69 |
The coordinator must be grouped with an edge conjunct | p. 71 |
The category decisiveness of non-final conjuncts in English | p. 72 |
Borsley's arguments against the layered complementation in English | p. 73 |
Chapter summary | p. 75 |
No Special Syntactic Constraint | p. 77 |
The Conjunct Constraint and the lexical properties of coordinators | p. 79 |
Introduction | p. 79 |
The CCi and CCe | p. 79 |
Previous approaches to the CC | p. 81 |
A new account of the CC | p. 85 |
The CCi and the asymmetry in conjunct drop | p. 88 |
Conjunct drop in right-branching coordinate complexes | p. 88 |
Conjunct drop in left-branching coordinate complexes | p. 89 |
Clause-final coordinator-like elements | p. 90 |
The CCe and the Chinese de constructions | p. 92 |
Two kinds of de constructions | p. 93 |
The various categories of kernel-final constructions | p. 95 |
De as the head of the whole complex | p. 97 |
The chameleon-like nature of de keeps the kernel elements in situ | p. 105 |
The CCe and the he/gen comitative constructions in Chinese | p. 107 |
Introduction: he/gen constructions in Chinese | p. 108 |
Coordinator properties of the comitative he/gen | p. 109 |
Violation of the CCe in non-distributive coordination | p. 114 |
Chapter summary | p. 122 |
The Element Constraint and the semantic relatedness of conjuncts | p. 124 |
Introduction | p. 124 |
Asymmetrical coordination as a type of natural coordination | p. 124 |
Natural coordination | p. 124 |
Asymmetrical coordination | p. 127 |
Some formal contrasts between natural and accidental coordination | p. 128 |
The EC violation in asymmetrical coordination | p. 135 |
Chapter summary | p. 139 |
Three puzzles solved by rejecting the CSC | p. 141 |
Introduction | p. 141 |
Deriving Split Argument Constructions by giving up the CC | p. 141 |
The Split Argument Construction (SAC) | p. 141 |
The two DPs of a SAC form a coordinate complex | p. 145 |
Deriving SACs by conjunct raising | p. 145 |
Section summary | p. 153 |
Deriving Modifier-Sharing Constructions by giving up the CC | p. 154 |
The Modifier-Sharing Construction (MSC) | p. 154 |
MSCs have coordinate antecedents | p. 155 |
Deriving MSCs by sideward conjunct raising | p. 160 |
A comparison with the multiple dimensional analysis | p. 166 |
Section summary | p. 167 |
Deriving Interwoven Dependency Constructions by giving up the EC | p. 168 |
The Interwoven Dependency Construction (IDC) | p. 169 |
Previous analyses | p. 171 |
IDCs exhibit parallel movement dependencies | p. 172 |
Deriving IDCs by sideward extraction from conjuncts | p. 173 |
Section summary | p. 175 |
Chapter summary | p. 176 |
Relativized parallelism in syntactic complexes | p. 177 |
Introduction | p. 177 |
The Relativized Parallelism Requirement (RPR) | p. 178 |
The Coordination of Likes Constraint and other similar constraints | p. 178 |
The RPR: conjuncts must hold a coherence relation | p. 181 |
The components of the RPR | p. 183 |
Examples of the semantic relatedness between conjuncts | p. 183 |
Examples of the resemblance between conjuncts in semantic types | p. 186 |
The CLC: two further issues | p. 190 |
Examples of the resemblance between conjuncts in dependency chains | p. 192 |
The RPR in language processing | p. 195 |
The more tightly semantically connected, the easier to process | p. 195 |
The more parallel in merged structures, the easier to process | p. 196 |
The more parallel in dependency chains, the easier to process | p. 197 |
The nature of the RPR | p. 198 |
The RPR is a filter on representations of syntactic complexes | p. 198 |
The general economy motivation of the RPR | p. 201 |
Chapter summary and conclusions for Part III | p. 202 |
No Special Syntactic Operation | p. 205 |
The derivation of coordinate clauses with identity adjectives | p. 207 |
Introduction | p. 207 |
The identity adjective same | p. 208 |
The general plural-¿ licensing of identity adjectives | p. 208 |
Major questions about the syntax of TLCs | p. 213 |
Building well-formed conjuncts of TLCs | p. 214 |
The existence of a silent nominal in the second conjunct | p. 214 |
The interpretation of the silent argument in the second conjunct | p. 215 |
The syntactic category of the silent argument in the second conjunct | p. 216 |
Extraction of SEs out of their licensing coordinate complexes | p. 216 |
The extraction of SEs out of first conjuncts | p. 217 |
Carlson's constraint and the motivation for the SE extraction | p. 218 |
The silence of the pro-form in the second conjunct of a TLC | p. 220 |
Chapter summary | p. 221 |
Forming Across-the-Board constructions without forking movement | p. 222 |
Introduction | p. 222 |
ATB constructions as TLCs | p. 222 |
The identity readings of ATB constructions | p. 223 |
The syntactic reality of a silent argument in the second conjunct | p. 225 |
The correspondence between extraction and identity readings | p. 229 |
The compatibility between two types of wh-expressions | p. 231 |
The respectively readings of certain ATB constructions | p. 233 |
Munn's respectively readings | p. 233 |
The availability of respectively readings in modification constructions | p. 234 |
A comparison with other approaches | p. 236 |
The characteristics of our approach | p. 237 |
The null operator approach | p. 237 |
The multiple dimensional approach | p. 238 |
The deletion approach | p. 240 |
The sideward movement approach | p. 240 |
Chapter summary and conclusions of Part IV | p. 241 |
Conclusions | p. 242 |
References | p. 247 |
Index | p. 267 |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
An electronic version of this book is available through VitalSource.
This book is viewable on PC, Mac, iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch, and most smartphones.
By purchasing, you will be able to view this book online, as well as download it, for the chosen number of days.
Digital License
You are licensing a digital product for a set duration. Durations are set forth in the product description, with "Lifetime" typically meaning five (5) years of online access and permanent download to a supported device. All licenses are non-transferable.
More details can be found here.
A downloadable version of this book is available through the eCampus Reader or compatible Adobe readers.
Applications are available on iOS, Android, PC, Mac, and Windows Mobile platforms.
Please view the compatibility matrix prior to purchase.