Fr. 195.00

The Cambridge Handbook of the Minimalist Program

English · Hardback

Will be released 30.11.2025

Description

Read more

List of contents










List of figures; List of tables; List of contributors; Preface; Part I. The Big Picture: 1. The minimalist program in the 2020s: theory, methodology, and the road ahead Evelina Leivada and Kleanthes K. Grohmann; 2. Minimalism as the latest stage of generativism Norbert Hornstein; 3. Early minimalism Howard Lasnik; 4. Phase theory: inception, developments and challenges Irene Fernández-Serrano; 5.Minimalism and a meaning first view Uli Sauerland and Artemis Alexiadou; 6. Principles of UG and the minimalist program David Adger and Ian Roberts; Part II. Issues of Labeling: 7. Labeling theory Andreas Blümel; 8. Movement as a labeling device: some outstanding problems Caterina Donati; 9. Labeling without labels Chris Collins and Daniel Seely; 10. What we lose if labels are not in syntax and how we can get it back Antonio Fábregas; 11. Recursion in sign languages Carlo Cecchetto; 12. Economy Marc Richards; Part III. The Realm of Merge: 13. Basic operations Winfried Lechner; 14. Merge, move, and contextuality of syntax: the role of labeling, successive-cyclicity, and EPP effects Željko Boškovi¿; 15. Merge Jan-Wouter Zwart; 16. Merge: internal and parallel Barbara Citko; 17. Merge and the formal recognition of the workspace Hisatsugu Kitahara and Daniel Seely; 18. Copy and move: a brief historical review Victor Junnan Pan; 19. Distinguishing copies and repetitions Chris Collins and Erich Groat; 20. Copy theory and sideward movement Jairo Nunes; Part IV. Structural Concerns: 21. Phrase structure Dennis Ott; 22. Locality and (minimal) search Kenyon Garrett Branan and Michael Erlewine; 23. Anti-locality Norvin Richard; 24. Why we need roots in minimalism Phoevos Panagiotidis and Vitor Nóbrega; 25. Minimalism and morphology Laura Kalin, and Philipp Weisser; 26. Late insertion Faruk Akkü 27. Structural implications of late insertion Peter Svenonius; Part V. Features and Agree(ment): 28. The syntactic limits of probe-goal (a)symmetries Sandhya Sundaresan and Hedde Zeijlstra; 29. Features Ora Matushansky; 30. Phi-feature agreement in syntax Omer Preminger; 31. Agree Roberta D'Alessandro; 32. Agree(ment) in sign languages Josep Quer; 33. ¿-feature sharing Stefan Keine; Part VI. Towards the Interfaces: 34. Cyclicity Claire Halpert; 35. The domain of transfer Alan Hezao Ke; 36. Linearization (as part of core syntax) Cristiano Chesi; 37. Linearization of sign language structure Carlo Cecchetto and Josep Quer; 38. Linearization: there are no strings William J. Idsardi and Eric Raimy; 39. Spell-out Aritz Irurtzun; 40.Spell-out and its consequences on the PF branch Tobias Scheer; Index.

About the author

Kleanthes K. Grohmann is Professor of Biolinguistics in the Department of English Studies at the University of Cyprus and Director of the Cyprus Acquisition Team. He is editor-in-chief of Biolinguistics and has published widely with emphasis on syntactic theory, language development, pathologies, and multilingualism.Evelina Leivada is ICREA Research Professor at the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona. She has published extensively on the topics of bilingualism and language learning in vivo and in silico.

Product details

Assisted by Grohmann Kleanthes K. (Editor), Evelina Leivada (Editor)
Publisher Cambridge Academic
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Release 30.11.2025
 
EAN 9781108836197
ISBN 978-1-108-83619-7
Illustrations Worked examples or Exercises
Series Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > General and comparative linguistics

LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / General, Grammar, syntax & morphology, Grammar, syntax and morphology

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.