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1
All about alles: The syntax of wh-quantifier float in German
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2
Investigations on salvation and non-salvation by deletion
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3
Verb Raising in Icelandic Infinitives
In: North East Linguistics Society (2020)
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4
Superiority and Generalized Binding
In: North East Linguistics Society (2020)
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5
Control in Modern Greek
In: North East Linguistics Society (2020)
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6
Syntactic structures after 60 years
Hornstein, Norbert [Herausgeber]; Lasnik, Howard [Herausgeber]; Patel-Grosz, Pritty [Herausgeber]. - Boston : De Gruyter Mouton, 2018
DNB Subject Category Language
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7
Syntactic Structures after 60 Years : The Impact of the Chomskyan Revolution in Linguistics
Patel-Grosz, Pritty Herausgeber]. - Boston : De Gruyter, 2018
DNB Subject Category Language
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8
Syntactic structures after 60 years
Lasnik, Howard (Herausgeber); Yang, Charles D. (Herausgeber); Hornstein, Norbert (Herausgeber). - Berlin : De Gruyter Mouton, 2018
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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9
EXISTENTIALS, A-CHAINS AND RECONSTRUCTION
In: DELTA: Documentação e Estudos em Linguística Teórica e Aplicada; v. 16, n. 3 (2000): NUMERO ESPECIAL ; 1678-460X ; 0102-4450 (2018)
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10
The Rationalism of Generative Grammar
In: 50 Years Later ([2015]), S. 147-158
Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft
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11
The Routledge handbook of syntax
Van Valin, Robert D.; Roberts, Ian G.; Truswell, Robert. - London [u.a.] : Routledge, 2014
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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12
Some Purported Problems for the Movement Theory of Control
In: Linguistic inquiry. - Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Pr. 45 (2014) 3, 449-462
OLC Linguistik
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13
On recursion
Watumull, Jeffrey; Hauser, Marc D.; Roberts, Ian G.. - : Frontiers Media S.A., 2014
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14
Epicene Agreement and Inflected Infinitives When the Data Is “Under Control”: A Reply to Modesto ()
In: Syntax. - Oxford : Wiley-Blackwell 16 (2013) 3, 292-309
OLC Linguistik
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15
A Note on P-Stranding and Adjunct Extraction from Nominals
In: Linguistic inquiry. - Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Pr. 44 (2013) 4, 669-674
OLC Linguistik
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16
Experimental syntax and island effects
Sprouse, John (Hrsg.); Hornstein, Norbert (Hrsg.). - Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2013
IDS Bibliografie zur deutschen Grammatik
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17
Remarks on computational complexity: response to Abels
In: Mind & language. - Oxford : Wiley-Blackwell 28 (2013) 4, 430-434
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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18
Three grades of grammatical involvement: syntax from a minimalist perspective
In: Mind & language. - Oxford : Wiley-Blackwell 28 (2013) 4, 392-420
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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19
Experimental syntax and island effects
Hornstein, Norbert (Hrsg.); Sprouse, Jon (Hrsg.). - Cambridge : Cambridge Univ. Press, 2013
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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20
On recursion
In: Frontiers (2013)
Abstract: It is a truism that conceptual understanding of a hypothesis is required for its empirical investigation. However, the concept of recursion as articulated in the context of linguistic analysis has been perennially confused. Nowhere has this been more evident than in attempts to critique and extend Hauseretal's. (2002) articulation. These authors put forward the hypothesis that what is uniquely human and unique to the faculty of language—the faculty of language in the narrow sense (FLN)—is a recursive system that generates and maps syntactic objects to conceptual-intentional and sensory-motor systems. This thesis was based on the standard mathematical definition of recursion as understood by Gödel and Turing, and yet has commonly been interpreted in other ways, most notably and incorrectly as a thesis about the capacity for syntactic embedding. As we explain, the recursiveness of a function is defined independent of such output, whether infinite or finite, embedded or unembedded—existent or non-existent. And to the extent that embedding is a sufficient, though not necessary, diagnostic of recursion, it has not been established that the apparent restriction on embedding in some languages is of any theoretical import. Misunderstanding of these facts has generated research that is often irrelevant to the FLN thesis as well as to other theories of language competence that focus on its generative power of expression. This essay is an attempt to bring conceptual clarity to such discussions as well as to future empirical investigations by explaining three criterial properties of recursion: computability (i.e., rules in intension rather than lists in extension); definition by induction (i.e., rules strongly generative of structure); and mathematical induction (i.e., rules for the principled—and potentially unbounded—expansion of strongly generated structure). By these necessary and sufficient criteria, the grammars of all natural languages are recursive.
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/85687
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