The author questions the status quo in Romance linguistics. The Ergative/Unaccusative syntactic approach has been accepted as the orthodox analytical paradigm. He re-examines both the theoretical imperative and the empirical evidence for that approach, drawing on a large amount of new and surprising data from Italian, Spanish, French and Catalan.
Table des matières
List of Tables Acknowledgements Sources of Historical Examples The Ergative Analysis and the Unaccusative Hypothesis Expletive Inversion Partitive Cliticization Bare Subjects Perfect Auxiliary Selection Past Participle Agreement Participial Absolutes Conclusion Notes References Index
A propos de l’auteur
IAN E. MACKENZIE is Senior Lecturer in Spanish at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, UK. His specialist areas are Spanish syntax and semantics, philosophy of language and Spanish in Latin America. He is the author of four books including
Spanish: an Essential Grammar (with Peter T. Bradley),