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The Raising of Predicates: Predicative Noun Phrases and the Theory of Clause Structure Book

The Raising of Predicates: Predicative Noun Phrases and the Theory of Clause Structure
The Raising of Predicates: Predicative Noun Phrases and the Theory of Clause Structure, One of the basic premises of the theory of syntax is that clause structures can be minimally identified as containing a verb phrase, playing the role of predicate, and a noun phrase, playing the role of subject. In this study Andrea Moro identifies a new , The Raising of Predicates: Predicative Noun Phrases and the Theory of Clause Structure has a rating of 4.5 stars
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The Raising of Predicates: Predicative Noun Phrases and the Theory of Clause Structure, One of the basic premises of the theory of syntax is that clause structures can be minimally identified as containing a verb phrase, playing the role of predicate, and a noun phrase, playing the role of subject. In this study Andrea Moro identifies a new , The Raising of Predicates: Predicative Noun Phrases and the Theory of Clause Structure
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  • The Raising of Predicates: Predicative Noun Phrases and the Theory of Clause Structure
  • Written by author Andrea Moro
  • Published by Cambridge University Press, January 2006
  • One of the basic premises of the theory of syntax is that clause structures can be minimally identified as containing a verb phrase, playing the role of predicate, and a noun phrase, playing the role of subject. In this study Andrea Moro identifies a new
  • New light is shed on some classical issues such as the distribution and nature of expletives, locality theory, cliticization phenomena, possessive constructions, and the cross-linguistic variations of the Definiteness Effect.
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Acknowledgments
Introduction: for apparently unrelated empirical domains1
1The anomaly of copular sentences: the raising of predicates17
2The syntax of ci94
3Are there parameters in semantics? The defining properties of existential sentences131
4The 'quasi-copula': the role of finite clauses in seem-sentences167
5A view beyond: unaccusativity as an epiphenomenon214
AppendixA brief history of the copula248
Notes262
References301
Index310


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The Raising of Predicates: Predicative Noun Phrases and the Theory of Clause Structure, One of the basic premises of the theory of syntax is that clause structures can be minimally identified as containing a verb phrase, playing the role of predicate, and a noun phrase, playing the role of subject. In this study Andrea Moro identifies a new , The Raising of Predicates: Predicative Noun Phrases and the Theory of Clause Structure

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The Raising of Predicates: Predicative Noun Phrases and the Theory of Clause Structure, One of the basic premises of the theory of syntax is that clause structures can be minimally identified as containing a verb phrase, playing the role of predicate, and a noun phrase, playing the role of subject. In this study Andrea Moro identifies a new , The Raising of Predicates: Predicative Noun Phrases and the Theory of Clause Structure

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The Raising of Predicates: Predicative Noun Phrases and the Theory of Clause Structure, One of the basic premises of the theory of syntax is that clause structures can be minimally identified as containing a verb phrase, playing the role of predicate, and a noun phrase, playing the role of subject. In this study Andrea Moro identifies a new , The Raising of Predicates: Predicative Noun Phrases and the Theory of Clause Structure

The Raising of Predicates: Predicative Noun Phrases and the Theory of Clause Structure

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