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Phi theory : phi-features across modules and interfaces / edited by Daniel Harbour, David Adger, and Susan Béjar.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Oxford linguistics | Oxford studies in theoretical linguistics ; 16.Publication details: Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2008.Description: 1 online resource (xiii, 376 pages) : illustrationsContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780191526732
  • 0191526738
  • 1281528986
  • 9781281528988
  • 9786611528980
  • 6611528989
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Phi theory.DDC classification:
  • 415 22
LOC classification:
  • P151 .P49 2008eb
Other classification:
  • 17.52
  • 17.56
  • 17.55
  • 70.03
Online resources:
Contents:
Why phi? / David Adger and Daniel Harbour -- Features on bound pronouns / Irene Heim -- On the semantic markedness of phi-features / Uli Sauerland -- Phi-agree and theta-related case / Milan Rezac -- Conditions on phi-agree / Susana Bejar -- Phi-feature competition in morphology and syntax / Martha McGinnis -- Discontinuous agreement and the syntax--morphology interface / Daniel Harbour -- Third-person marking in menominee / Jochen Trommer -- When is a syncretism more than a syncretism? / Heidi Harley -- Where's phi? agreement as a post syntactic operation / Jonathan David Bobaljik -- Cross-modular parallels in the study of phon and phi / Andrew Nevins.
Summary: This book brings together the different strands and styles of research on Phi-features, such as person, number, and gender. It presents the core questions, major results, and new directions of this area of linguistic theory and shows how Phi Theory casts light on the nature of interfaces and the structure of the grammar. - ;Phi-features, such as person, number, and gender, present a rare opportunity for syntacticians, morphologists and semanticists to collaborate on a research enterprise in which they all have an equal stake and which they all approach with data and insights from their own fie.
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Includes bibliographical references and indexes.

Why phi? / David Adger and Daniel Harbour -- Features on bound pronouns / Irene Heim -- On the semantic markedness of phi-features / Uli Sauerland -- Phi-agree and theta-related case / Milan Rezac -- Conditions on phi-agree / Susana Bejar -- Phi-feature competition in morphology and syntax / Martha McGinnis -- Discontinuous agreement and the syntax--morphology interface / Daniel Harbour -- Third-person marking in menominee / Jochen Trommer -- When is a syncretism more than a syncretism? / Heidi Harley -- Where's phi? agreement as a post syntactic operation / Jonathan David Bobaljik -- Cross-modular parallels in the study of phon and phi / Andrew Nevins.

Print version record.

This book brings together the different strands and styles of research on Phi-features, such as person, number, and gender. It presents the core questions, major results, and new directions of this area of linguistic theory and shows how Phi Theory casts light on the nature of interfaces and the structure of the grammar. - ;Phi-features, such as person, number, and gender, present a rare opportunity for syntacticians, morphologists and semanticists to collaborate on a research enterprise in which they all have an equal stake and which they all approach with data and insights from their own fie.

English.

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