Unraveling the complexity of SE

গ্রন্থ-পঞ্জীর বিবরন
সংস্থা লেখক: SpringerLink (Online service)
অন্যান্য লেখক: Armstrong, Grant (Editor), MacDonald, Jonathan E. (Editor)
সংক্ষিপ্ত:XI, 348 p. 70 illus.
text
ভাষা:ইংরেজি
প্রকাশিত: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2021.
সংস্করন:1st ed. 2021.
মালা:Studies in Natural Language and Linguistic Theory, 99
বিষয়গুলি:
অনলাইন ব্যবহার করুন:https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-57004-0
বিন্যাস: বৈদ্যুতিক বৈদ্যুতিন গ্রন্থ
সূচিপত্রের সারণি:
  • Chapter 1. A guide to understanding SE constructions: where they come from and how they are connected (Grant Armstrong and Jonathan MacDonald)
  • Part I: Diachronic perspectives
  • Chapter 2. The development of SE from Latin to Spanish and the reflexive object cycle (Matthew Maddox)
  • Chapter 3. Null-Subjects and se revisited: what medieval Romance varieties reveal (Anne Wolfsgruber)
  • Part II: Voice/little v and above
  • Chapter 4. On (un)grammatical clitic sequences in impersonal se constructions (Jonathan E. MacDonald and Jeriel Melgares)
  • Chapter 5. Implicit agents and the Person Constraint on SE-passives (Carmen Dobrovie-Sorin)
  • Chapter 6. On the nature of the impersonal SE: case, interpretation and variation (Francisco Ordóñez)
  • Chapter 7. Personal SE with unergatives in Romanian (Monica Irimia and Virginia Hill)
  • Part III: Voice/little v and below
  • Chapter 8. On a class of figure reflexives in Romanian: Ion se spală pe mâini ‘John washes his hands’ (Alexandra Cornilescu and Alexandru Nicolae)
  • Chapter 9. Causative SE: a transitive analysis (Grant Armstrong and Paula Kempchinsky)
  • Chapter 10. Light verbs and the syntactic configurations of SE (Alfredo García Pardo)
  • Chapter 11. The role of SE and NE in Romance verbs of directed motion. Evidence from Catalan, Italian, Aragonese and Spanish varieties (Anna Pineda)
  • Chapter 12. Scalar constraints on anticausative se. The aspectual hypothesis revisited (Margot Vivanco)
  • Part IV: A unifying perspective
  • Chapter 13. Spanish se as a high and low verbalizer (David Basilico)
  • Index.