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Artemis Alexiadou

    Local modelling of non-local dependencies in syntax
    The Syntax of Argument Structure
    Adverb Placement
    Hausegiester!: A comprehensive guide to the nearly forgotten creatures of German folklore
    External Arguments in Transitivity Alternations: A Layering Approach
    Perfect explorations
    • Artemis Alexiadou is Professor of English Linguistics at the University of Stuttgart, Germany. Monika Rathert is Research Assistant at the University of Tübingen, Germany. Arnim von Stechow is Professor of Linguistics at the University of Tübingen, Germany.

      Perfect explorations
    • Focusing on the syntax of external arguments, the book delves into transitivity alternations through a cross-linguistic lens, primarily utilizing data from English, German, and Greek. It examines the intricacies of the causative/anti-causative alternation and the processes involved in forming adjectival participles, offering insights into the structural variations and similarities across these languages.

      External Arguments in Transitivity Alternations: A Layering Approach
    • "The spirits of German folklore inhabit the pages of this book just as they settled the homesteads of ancient Germany. Belief in these creatures shaped daily life for centuries--first shared orally and later written down and compiled, most famously by the Brothers Grimm. Now, in the 21st century, a team of three German creators have set themselves the mission of bringing these creatures back from the fog of oblivion to the international public. Domestic dragons and wild women, Kobolds and Wichtel are portrayed through the lens of narrative and mythological research showing their regional peculiarities within European folktales. Each creature is brought to life as a detailed sculpture in original size, based on historical descriptions and beautifully photographed in Germany, in the landscape that these creatures might once have walked. A new, spectacular approach that combines both art and cultural studies in an innovative way."-- Provided by publisher

      Hausegiester!: A comprehensive guide to the nearly forgotten creatures of German folklore
    • This work investigates a number of central issues in the syntax of adverbs with special reference to Greek in the light of Kayne's Antisymmetry Hypothesis. It looks at the problems that the syntax of adverbs raises and contains a brief introduction to antisymmetry and the Minimalist Program.

      Adverb Placement
    • The Syntax of Argument Structure

      Empirical Advancements and Theoretical Relevance

      Bridging theoretical modelling and advanced empirical techniques is a central aim of current linguistic research. The progress in empirical methods contributes to the precise estimation of the properties of linguistic data and promises new ways for justifying theoretical models and testing their implications. The contributions to the present collective volume take up this challenge and focus on the relevance of empirical results achieved through up-to-date methodology for the theoretical analysis and modelling of argument structure. They tackle issues of argument structure from different perspectives addressing questions related to diverse verb types (unaccusatives, unergatives, (di)transitives, psych verbs), morpho-syntactic operations (prefixation, simple vs. particle verbs), case distinctions (dative vs. accusative, case vs. prepositions), argument and voice alternations (dative vs. benefactive alternation, active vs. passive), word order alternations and the impact of animacy, agentivity, and eventivity on argument structure. The volume will be of interest to theoretical linguists, psycholinguists, and corpus linguists interested in the syntax of argument structure and its modelling using precise empirical methods.

      The Syntax of Argument Structure
    • Syntactic dependencies are often non-local: They can involve two positions in a syntactic structure whose correspondence cannot be captured by invoking concepts like minimal clause or predicate/argument structure. Relevant phenomena include long-distance movement, long-distance reflexivization, long-distance agreement, control, non-local deletion, long-distance case assignment, consecutio temporum, extended scope of negation, and semantic binding of pronouns. A recurring strategy pursued in many contemporary syntactic theories is to model cases of non-local dependencies in a strictly local way, by successively passing on the relevant information in small domains of syntactic structures. The present volume brings together eighteen articles that investigate non-local dependencies in movement, agreement, binding, scope, and deletion constructions from different theoretical backgrounds (among them versions of the Minimalist Program, HPSG, and Categorial Grammar), and based on evidence from a variety of typologically distinct languages. This way, advantages and disadvantages of local treatments of non-local dependencies become evident. Furthermore, it turns out that local analyses of non-local phenomena developed in different syntactic theories (spanning the derivational/declarative divide) often may not only share identical research questions but also rely on identical research strategies.

      Local modelling of non-local dependencies in syntax
    • The volume explores the syntax of nominalizations, focusing on deverbal and deadjectival nominalizations, but also discussing the syntax of genitives and the syntax of distinct readings of nominalizations. The volume investigates the morpholgy-syntax interface as well as the semantics-syntax interface in the domain of nominalizations. The theoretical frameworks include distributed morphology, and minimalist syntax. Data from a variety of languages are taken into consideration, e. g. Hebrew, Bulgarian, Serbian, French, Spanish, German and English.

      The syntax of nominalizations across languages and frameworks