Verb Movement and Clause Structure in Old Romanian – Ebook Instant Download/Delivery ISBN(s): 9780198736509,0198736509,9780191056147, 0191056146
Product detail:
- ISBN 10: 0191056146
- ISBN 13: 9780191056147
- Author: Virginia Hill, Gabriela Alboiu
The book provides a formal analysis of root and complement clauses in Old Romanian. Virginia Hill and Gabriela Alboiu examine the combination of Balkan syntactic patterns such as generalized subjunctive complementation on the one hand, and the Romance morphology that supplies complementizers and grammatical mood forms on the other. The consequences of this mixed typology range from root clauses with non-finite verbs to split heads and repeated recycling in clausal complements. The book argues that discourse triggers at the left periphery are responsible for fluctuations in verb movement in finite clauses, while with gerunds and imperatives verb movement follows from functional constraints. It further argues that clausal complements to control and raising verbs systematically display the pattern of the Balkan subjunctive, and that the spell out of these clausal complements has been repeatedly recycled during the development of Romanian. Verb Movement and Clause Structure in Old Romanian presents a new perspective on the manifestation of Balkan Sprachbund properties in the language, and on the nature of parametric differences in relation to other Romance languages. It provides a unified explanation for a range of constructions that have previously been treated as separate phenomena, and places diachronic changes in Romanian in a wider context.
Table of contents:
- 1: Research background and theoretical framework
- 2: Subjects, complementizers, and clitics
- 3: High verb movement in finite clauses
- 4: Imperative clauses
- 5: Gerund clauses
- 6: De-indicatives: A faithful replica of the Balkan subjunctive
- 7: A-infinitives: A version of the Balkan subjunctive
- 8: Să-subjunctives: Another version of the Balkan subjunctive
- 9: Supine clauses: On the road to balkanization
- 10: Conclusions and remarks on the recycling of the Balkan subjunctive