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Frequency norms in Tashlhiyt, Part I
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In: https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-03511109 ; 2022 (2022)
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Hippocampal and auditory contributions to speech segmentation
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In: ISSN: 0010-9452 ; Cortex ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03604957 ; Cortex, Elsevier, 2022, ⟨10.1016/j.cortex.2022.01.017⟩ (2022)
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Can Homophone Interference Occur in Translation Equivalents of L1 Activated by L2 ...
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Intoxication and pitch control in tonal and non-tonal language speakers ...
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Just-Noticeable Differences of Fundamental Frequency Change in Mandarin-Speaking Children with Cochlear Implants
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In: Brain Sciences; Volume 12; Issue 4; Pages: 443 (2022)
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16 |
How We Failed in Context: A Text-Mining Approach to Understanding Hotel Service Failures
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In: Sustainability; Volume 14; Issue 5; Pages: 2675 (2022)
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17 |
Are We Indeed So Illuded? Recency and Frequency Illusions in Dutch Prescriptivism
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In: Languages; Volume 7; Issue 1; Pages: 42 (2022)
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18 |
Frequency, Informativity and Word Length: Insights from Typologically Diverse Corpora
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In: Entropy; Volume 24; Issue 2; Pages: 280 (2022)
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19 |
Paradigmatic Uniformity: Evidence from Heritage Speakers of Spanish
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In: Languages; Volume 7; Issue 1; Pages: 14 (2022)
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The Radical Unacceptability Hypothesis: Accounting for Unacceptability without Universal Constraints
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In: Languages; Volume 7; Issue 2; Pages: 96 (2022)
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Abstract:
The Radical Unacceptability Hypothesis (RUH) has been proposed as a way of explaining the unacceptability of extraction from islands and frozen structures. This hypothesis explicitly assumes a distinction between unacceptability due to violations of local well-formedness conditions—conditions on constituency, constituent order, and morphological form—and unacceptability due to extra-grammatical factors. We explore the RUH with respect to classical islands, and extend it to a broader range of phenomena, including freezing, A′ chain interactions, zero-relative clauses, topic islands, weak crossover, extraction from subjects and parasitic gaps, and sensitivity to information structure. The picture that emerges is consistent with the RUH, and suggests more generally that the unacceptability of extraction from otherwise well-formed configurations reflects non-syntactic factors, not principles of grammar.
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Keyword:
A′ constructions; frequency; island constraints; processing complexity; surprisal; syntactic theory; unacceptability and grammaticality
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URL: https://doi.org/10.3390/languages7020096
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