
From Latin to Romance Morphosyntactic Typology and Change
by Ledgeway, AdamBuy New
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Summary
Author Biography
Adam Ledgeway is University Senior Lecturer in Romance Philology in the Faculty of Modern and Medieval Languages of the University of Cambridge, and a Fellow of Downing College, Cambridge. His publications include A Comparative Syntax of the Dialects of Southern Italy (Wiley-Blackwell, 2000); Sui dialetti italoromanzi. Saggi in onore di Nigel B. Vincent (Biddles 2007, co-edited with D.Bentley); Grammatica diacronica del napoletano (Niemeyer 2009); Syntactic Variation: The Dialects of Italy (CUP 2010, co-edited with R.D'Alessandro and I.Roberts); In and Out of Italy: Lingua e cultura della migrazione italiana (Guerra 2010, co-edited with A.L.Lepschy); The Cambridge History of the Romance Languages (CUP 2011, co-edited with M. Maiden and J.C. Smith).
Table of Contents
Series preface | p. ix |
List of tables | p. xi |
List of abbreviations | p. xiii |
From Latin to Romance: introduction | p. 1 |
From Latin to Romance: the historical background | p. 1 |
Research questions | p. 2 |
Aims and objectives | p. 4 |
Acknowledgements | p. 8 |
Syntheticity and analyticity | p. 10 |
Traditional approach | p. 10 |
Problems | p. 12 |
Languages or constructions? | p. 12 |
Absolute vs relative interpretations | p. 16 |
Causal relations between analyticity and morphophonological erosion | p. 21 |
Gradual change and competition | p. 23 |
Explanatory power | p. 24 |
Grammaticalization | p. 28 |
Configurationality and the rise of constituent structure | p. 30 |
Introduction | p. 30 |
Nominal and verbal groups | p. 31 |
Latin | p. 35 |
Discontinuous structures | p. 43 |
Conclusion | p. 45 |
Romance | p. 47 |
Adjectival positions | p. 50 |
Restricted adjectival positions | p. 55 |
Complements and adjuncts | p. 57 |
The sentence | p. 59 |
Classical Latin | p. 59 |
Discontinuous structures | p. 61 |
Late Latin and Romance | p. 64 |
Conngurationality: concluding remarks | p. 71 |
Degrees of configurationality | p. 77 |
Conngurationality and the rise of functional structure | p. 81 |
Introduction | p. 81 |
Determiner phrase (DP) | p. 82 |
Indefinite article | p. 82 |
Definite article | p. 89 |
Late Latin | p. 89 |
Romance | p. 96 |
Ipse articles | p. 100 |
Neuter articles | p. 105 |
Conclusion | p. 107 |
Other determiners | p. 110 |
Romanian | p. 113 |
Demonstrative article | p. 113 |
Possessive article | p. 115 |
Inflectional phrase (IP) | p. 119 |
Romance auxiliaries | p. 119 |
Semantic weakening | p. 121 |
Morphosyntactic properties | p. 124 |
Morphophonological specialization | p. 127 |
Romance perfective auxiliary constructions | p. 130 |
Romance synthetic future(-in-the-past) | p. 134 |
Romance verb positions | p. 140 |
Summary and conclusions | p. 146 |
Complementizer phrase (CP) | p. 150 |
Evidence for Latin CP structure | p. 150 |
Archaic non-configurational pattern | p. 156 |
Evidence for Romance CP structure | p. 158 |
Topic and Focus Fields | p. 159 |
Internal structure of Topic and Focus fields | p. 162 |
Focus field | p. 162 |
Topic field | p. 166 |
Force and Finiteness | p. 169 |
Other projections | p. 176 |
Conclusion | p. 179 |
From Latin to Romance: a configurational approach | p. 181 |
Introduction | p. 181 |
Early evidence for functional structure | p. 183 |
Early evidence for configurationality | p. 185 |
Head parameter: traditional observations | p. 196 |
Some Romance counterexamples? | p. 198 |
Changing directions: Latin | p. 202 |
Early head-initial structures | p. 204 |
Complementizers and adpositions | p. 205 |
Comparatives | p. 207 |
Relatives | p. 209 |
Noun phrase | p. 210 |
Adjectives | p. 210 |
Genitives | p. 213 |
Concluding remarks | p. 218 |
Other categories | p. 219 |
Summary | p. 224 |
Verbal group | p. 225 |
Auxiliary and dependent infinitive | p. 234 |
Conclusion | p. 235 |
Changing directions: from Latin to Romance | p. 235 |
Head-last → head-first: roll-up | p. 236 |
Rise of head-initiality | p. 238 |
Position of complement clauses | p. 242 |
Position of nominal complements | p. 249 |
Other patterns of harmonization | p. 252 |
Clausal word order | p. 255 |
Pragmatic variation: left-edge fronting | p. 258 |
Identifying the left-edge: cola and left peripheries | p. 259 |
Modifier fronting | p. 262 |
Reanalysis: roll-up → edge-fronting | p. 269 |
Nominal fronting | p. 270 |
From Latin to Romance | p. 277 |
Conclusion | p. 281 |
Head-marking and dependent-marking | p. 284 |
Introduction | p. 284 |
Variation in marking | p. 286 |
Romance functional categories → Romance head-marking | p. 289 |
Head-marking on D | p. 290 |
Head-marking on Infl | p. 292 |
Head-marking on C | p. 298 |
Extreme head-marking: the case of Ripano | p. 299 |
Verbal domain | p. 300 |
Subject-verb agreement | p. 300 |
Subject-/object-verb agreement | p. 302 |
Object-verb agreement | p. 305 |
Contagious head-marking | p. 308 |
Conclusion | p. 310 |
The rise and fall of alignments | p. 312 |
Introduction | p. 312 |
Classical Latin | p. 314 |
Late Latin and conservative Romance: active/stative syntax | p. 316 |
. Verbal group | p. 317 |
Perfective auxiliary constructions | p. 317 |
Latin background | p. 317 |
Romance | p. 319 |
Participle agreement | p. 326 |
Nominal group | p. 328 |
Extended and generalized accusative | p. 328 |
Early Romance binary case systems | p. 333 |
Sentence: word order | p. 335 |
Other patterns | p. 336 |
Innovative Romance: nominative/accusative syntax | p. 340 |
Verbal group | p. 341 |
Perfective auxiliary constructions | p. 341 |
Participle agreement | p. 347 |
Sentence: word order | p. 349 |
Concluding remarks | p. 351 |
References | p. 353 |
Index | p. 409 |
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