The Place of Case in Grammar

The Place of Case in Grammar

  • Christina Sevdali
  • Dionysios Mertyris
  • Elena Anagnostopoulou
Publisher:Oxford University PressISBN 13: 9780192635419ISBN 10: 0192635417

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The Place of Case in Grammar is written by Christina Sevdali and published by Oxford University Press. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 0192635417 (ISBN 10) and 9780192635419 (ISBN 13).

This book deals with the category of case and where to place it in grammar. The crux of the debate lies in how the morphological expression of grammatical function should relate to formal syntax. In the generative tradition, this issue was addressed by the influential proposal that abstract syntactic Case should be dissociated from the morphological expression of case. The chapters in this book deal with a number of key issues in the ongoing debates that have emerged from this proposal. The first part discusses the modes that we need for structural case assignment, and how Case would relate to a theory of parameters. In the second part, contributors explore the division of labour between structural and inherent case, synchronically and diachronically, while the third part investigates individual cases and how they can illuminate case theory. The chapters discuss a wide range of phenomena, including differential object marking (DOM), global case splits, prepositional genitives and other prepositional phrases, nominative infinitival subjects, nominalizations of deponent verbs, and three-place predicates. They also draw on data from a variety of languages and language families, such as Hindi, Lithuanian, Kashmiri, Kinande, Greek, Hiberno-English, Romance, and Sahapatin.