Results 241 to 250 of about 9,235 (289)

Occipital lobe epilepsy presenting as content‐specific reading‐induced seizures

open access: yes
Epileptic Disorders, EarlyView.
Christopher M. Kyper   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

Verb movement in English and French

open access: yesVerb movement in English and French
openaire  

Verb placement and verb movement

2021
This chapter surveys and analyses the rich variation in verb placement and verb movement operations which is attested in the history of French. The analysis developed suggests than an original SOV grammar where the finite verb remains in-situ is reanalysed as one with optional verb movement to the left periphery during the Classical Latin period, with ...
exaly   +2 more sources

Verb Movement

open access: yes, 1994
Work on the movement of phrasal categories has been a central element of syntactic theorising almost since the earliest work on generative grammar. However, work on the movement of lexical elements, heads, has flourished only in recent years, stimulated originally by Chomsky's Empty Category Principle, and later by the work of Travis, Baker and Pollock.
openaire   +2 more sources

Verb Movement in Romance

open access: yes, 2018
This book provides a detailed account of verb movement across more than twenty standard and non-standard Romance varieties. It examines the position of the verb with respect to a wide selection of hierarchically ordered adverbs, as laid out in Cinque’s (1999) seminal work.
Norma Schifano   +1 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Verb movement in Germanic and Celtic languages: A flexible approach

open access: yesLingua, 2010
This paper develops a new perspective on the question of what type of verb movement the modern Celtic languages display, V to I movement or V to C movement. Under the standard assumption that the subject remains relatively low in these languages compared
Olaf Koeneman
exaly   +2 more sources

From Movement to Metaphor with Manner-of-Movement Verbs

Applied Linguistics, 2005
This paper concerns three two-stage experiments the aim of which was to find out whether enactment- and mime-based (EM and (2) more accurately interpret previously unknown metaphorical expressions which include them. The results of the experiments, which involved Dutch-speaking, young-adult advanced learners, provide evidence that mnemonic benefits ...
Lindstromberg, Seth, Boers, Frank
openaire   +2 more sources

Verb Movement in Acquisition and Aphasia: Same Problem, Different Solutions—Evidence from Dutch

open access: yesBrain and Language, 2001
This paper focuses on verb movement in agrammatism and child language. We present data from a sentence completion experiment with 6 Dutch agrammatic aphasics and 21 Dutch-speaking children.
Roelien Bastiaanse
exaly   +2 more sources

Syntactic and Phonological Verb Movement

Syntax, 2001
This paper defends the essentially syntactic nature of head movement, contra Chomsky (1999:30f). Head movement yields effects of word order that do not find a natural place in phonology, defined as the conversion of syntactic terminals to strings of phonemes. It also feeds syntactic processes such as NP‐raising in restructuring constructions. The only “
openaire   +2 more sources

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