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Projection of verb phrases IIIc: Complements of non-main verbs
Hans Broekhuis, Norbert Corver
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A contrastive study of Noun Phrase Complement Constructions in English and Japanese
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Mood in complementizer phrases in Spanish
Pragmatics & Cognition, 2010This article argues that language provides instructions for the interpretive work of the addressee. The result of this interpretive process is the establishment of linguistic meaning. On this assumption, the article aims at explaining how meaning is established on the basis of the category of mood in Spanish.
Lotte Dam, Helle Dam-Jensen
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A note on verb phrase complementation
Journal of Linguistics, 1968Evidently, if VPC does not explain the ungrammaticality of (7) there is no explanation for the ungrammaticality of (i ib). It appears Rosenbaum's argument for NP domination in the complement structures dealt with here is: x IS DOMINATED BY NP IF IT CAN BE PSEUDO-CLEFTED.
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Verb phrase complementation: A criticism
Journal of Linguistics, 1968In his recent article (cf. JL 3 (I967). 103-I i8), Peter Rosenbaum has attempted to show 'that the theory of English syntax contains at least two phrase structure rules [. . .] which introduce sentences. The first of these exemplifies the principle of NOUN PHRASE COMPLEMENTATION by which a sentence is introduced under the immediate domination of a noun
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The noun phrase as complement and as adverbialclause in contemporary English
English Studies, 1978(1978). The noun phrase as complement and as adverbialclause in contemporary English. English Studies: Vol. 59, No. 4, pp. 361-368.
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Abstract Whether pre-nominal clauses in Chinese need to be distinguished into different types has been controversial — should there be a distinction between gapped versus gapless, complement versus adjunct? Some argue that all pre-nominal clauses belong to the same category, like the proposals claiming that they are ...
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The Verb Phrase, Clausal Complements and Extraposition
1996In this chapter, we will take a close look at the German verbal projection. The major point of interest is that although the language selects the head-final setting of the headedness parameter, finite clauses are almost invariably found to the right of the verbal complex.
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