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Miyamoto, Yoichi – Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 1997
The report of research on English grammar argues that the intransitive resultative construction requires head-movement of the secondary predicate to the main predicate in order to assign the theta-role to the postverbal NP in LF. Then, this construction is taken as an instance in which theta-role assignment is derivational, supporting the findings…
Descriptors: English, Grammar, Language Patterns, Language Research
Berardo, Marcellino – Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 1997
To determine what psycholinguistic evidence (or external evidence) such as slips of the tongue, monosyllabic word blends, and novel word games reveals about syllable structure, this study focused on psycholinguistic research on the English and German syllable. English and German provide a good testing ground for evaluation of external evidence…
Descriptors: English, German, Language Patterns, Language Research
Qu, Yanfeng – Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 1994
This paper investigates the status of the null object in Mandarin Chinese. It proposes that if an object is topicalized, the empty category in the object position should be analyzed as a variable. If it is not topicalized, it is a "pro." It is argued that a pro resembles an overt pronoun in obeying Condition B, but differs from the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grammar, Language Patterns, Language Research

Jang, Youngjun – Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 1997
A study of the distribution and the nature of the so-called Multiple Subject Construction (MSC) in Korean is presented from the perspective of functional syntax theory. The major proposal is that multiple subjectivization is possible only when the first noun phrase of the multiple subjects is characterized by the rest of the clause. The…
Descriptors: Grammar, Idioms, Korean, Language Patterns
Villalba, Xavier – Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 1994
This paper examines the distribution of third person pronominal clitics in Catalan causative constructions (CC), suggesting that an analysis of CC and cliticization crucially involving head-movement (verb incorporation and determiner incorporation) can explain the phenomena. Such an analysis can also explain the optionality of clitic climbing and…
Descriptors: Case (Grammar), Form Classes (Languages), Grammar, Language Patterns
Khym, Hangyoo, Ed.; Kookiattikoon, Supath, Ed. – Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 1997
The seven working papers on linguistic theory contained in this volume include: "Two Properties of the Intransitive Resultative Construction" (Yoichi Miyamoto); "Multiple Subject Construction in Korean: A Functional Explanation" (Youngjun Jang); "Constraints on Noun Incorporation in Korean" (Hangyoo Khym);…
Descriptors: Grammar, Idioms, Korean, Language Patterns
Khym, Hangyoo – Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 1997
A study of the noun incorporation phenomenon in Korean suggests that noun incorporation occurs at D-structure and obeys the Head Movement Constraint syntactically, and the Theme-Only Constraint semantically. First, the structure of "sunrise"-type words is identified, showing that before derivation through nominalization of the affix "-i,"…
Descriptors: Korean, Language Patterns, Language Research, Linguistic Theory
Dryer, Matthew S. – Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 1997
Kutenai has an obviation system reminiscent of the systems found in Algonquian languages, in which at most one third person nominal in a clause is proximate and others are obviate. Although the behavior of proximate nominals within clauses and within texts reflects a special status for proximates as having some sort of "higher rank" than…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Language Patterns, Language Research, Linguistic Theory
Cho, Mi-Hui – Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 1994
The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate the existence of nonsubject binding of the so-called long distance anaphor in languages like Korean and Japanese and to give a principled account of why and when it happens. The Korean reflexive pronoun "caki" ('self') is bound by local and long-distance antecedents. Nonsubject binding occurs…
Descriptors: Grammar, Korean, Language Patterns, Language Research
Yamada, Makoto – Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 1997
As an optional movement, "scrambling" in Japanese has been one of the major obstacles to the Minimalist Program, in which movements occur only when necessary. One theorist has argued, in an attempt to accommodate this phenomenon to the Minimalist Program, that verb phrase-adjunction scrambling should be analyzed as base-generated constructions and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grammar, Japanese, Language Patterns
Choi, Dong-Ik – Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 1997
An analysis of long-distance anaphora, a binding phenomenon in which reflexives find their antecedents outside their local domain, is presented, using data from English, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Russian, Icelandic, and Italian. It is found that no approach deals with long-distance anaphors exclusively and elegantly. The binding domain…
Descriptors: Chinese, English, Grammar, Italian
Kyle, John, Ed.; Khym, Hangyoo, Ed.; Kookiattikoon, Supath, Ed. – Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 1997
Four papers on Native American languages include these: "Reduplicated Numerals in Salish" (Gregory D. S. Anderson), which analyzes these patterns in Salish and compares them with other Salish languages; "Unitariness and Partial Identification in the Bella Coola Middle Voice" (David Beck), which argues for a single morpheme,…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Contrastive Linguistics, Grammar, Language Patterns
Beck, David – Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 1997
The Bella Coola suffix "-m" has been analyzed in the literature as two or even three separate morphemes, based on the variable effects it has on the transitivity of its base. The segment is argued for here as a single morpheme with a unified meaning, specifically as a marker of a special case of one definition of the middle voice,…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Foreign Countries, Language Patterns, Language Research
Khym, Hangyoo; Kookiattikoon, Supath – Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 1997
Previous theory concerning the variable behavior verbs in unaccusative/unergative alternation in Dutch, Hebrew, and Italian, which concludes that the unergative/unaccusative distinction is not syntactic but aspectual/semantic, is challenged. Discrepancies and inconsistencies are found in the grammatical functions of aspectual functional…
Descriptors: Dutch, Finnish, Foreign Countries, German
Anderson, Gregory D. S. – Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 1997
A salient characteristic of the morpho-lexical systems of the Salish languages is the widespread use of reduplication in both derivational and inflectional functions. Salish reduplication signals such typologically common categories as "distributive/plural,""repetitive/continuative," and "diminutive," the cross-linguistically marked but typically…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Contrastive Linguistics, Language Patterns, Language Research
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