02341nam a22003615i 4500001001800000003000900018005001700027007001500044008004100059020001800100020001900118024003100137082001200168100002700180245009700207264004600304300003300350336002600383337002600409338003600435347002400471490007200495505039000567520070200957650001701659650001701676650002701693710003401720773002001754776003601774830007201810856009701882978-1-4020-4308-6DE-He21320260521092106.0cr nn 008mamaa100301s2006 ne | s |||| 0|eng d a9781402043086 a997814020430867 a10.1007/1-4020-4308-22doi04a4102231 aLEE, FELICIA.eeditor.10aREMNANT RAISING AND VSO CLAUSALARCHITECTUREh[electronic resource] /cedited by FELICIA LEE. 1aDordrecht :bSpringer Netherlands,c2006. aXI, 273 p.bonline resource. atextbtxt2rdacontent acomputerbc2rdamedia aonline resourcebcr2rdacarrier atext filebPDF2rda1 aStudies in Natural Language and Linguistic Theory,x0924-4670 ;v660 aAn Introduction to San Lucas Quiaviná? Zapotec -- Background and Theoretical Assumptions -- The Syntax of Verb Raising in SLQZ: Arguments for VP Raising -- Further Consequences of VP-Remnant Movement: Some Common Negation Structures in SLQZ -- More on the Structure of the Left Periphery:The Syntax of Questions -- The Interaction of Tense and Aspect in San Lucas Quiaviná?Zapotec. aSan Lucas Quiaviní Zapotec, an endangered and little-examined indigenous language of Mexico, shows a range of syntactic and morphological phenomena incompatible with standard Minimalist accounts of verb movement: verbs and clearly phrasal constituents behave identically in a number of syntactic constructions, and the ordering of verbal morphemes is problematic for standard assumptions of verbal head movement. This work proposes a VP-remnant raising account for these phenomena, motivated by Kayne's (1992) Antisymmetry program. This work also examines consequences of phrasal remnant movement for negation constructions, question formation; and the interpretation of tense, aspect, and mood. 0aLINGUISTICS.14aLINGUISTICS.24aLINGUISTICS (GENERAL).2 aSpringerLink (Online service)0 tSpringer eBooks08iPrinted edition:z9781402043000 0aStudies in Natural Language and Linguistic Theory,x0924-4670 ;v6640uhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-4308-2zVer el texto completo en las instalaciones del CICY