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Deriving Syntactic Relations

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Deriving Syntactic Relations Synopsis

A pioneering new approach to a long-debated topic at the heart of syntax: what are the primitive concepts and operations of syntax? This book argues, appealing in part to the logic of Chomsky's Minimalist Program, that the primitive operations of syntax form relations between words rather than combining words to form constituents. Just three basic relations, definable in terms of inherent selection properties of words, are required in natural language syntax: projection, argument selection, and modification. In the radically simplified account of generative grammar Bowers proposes there are just two interface levels, which interact with our conceptual and sensory systems, and a lexicon from which an infinite number of sentences can be constructed. The theory also provides a natural interpretation of phase theory, enabling a better formulation of many island constraints, as well as providing the basis for a unified approach to ellipsis phenomena.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9781107480650
Publication date: 24th September 2020
Author: John Cornell University, New York Bowers
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 306 pages
Series: Cambridge Studies in Linguistics
Genres: Grammar, syntax and morphology
Linguistics