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Romance Languages and Linguistic Theory 14
Selected papers from the 46th Linguistic Symposium on Romance Languages (LSRL), Stony Brook, NY
This book contains a peer-reviewed selection of papers presented at the 46th Linguistic Symposium on Romance Languages (LSRL 46) that took place in April 2016 at Stony Brook University (SUNY), New York. The most current research and debates on bilingualism, historical linguistics, morphology, phonology, semantics, sociolinguistics, and syntax can be found in its pages. This collection will be of interest to Romance linguists and general linguists as well.
[Romance Languages and Linguistic Theory, 14] 2018. vii, 345 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 22 July 2018
Published online on 22 July 2018
© John Benjamins
Table of Contents
- Introduction LSRL 46 Stony Brook | pp. 1–3
- Chapter 1. Expletive negation is not expletive: Evidence from aspect in SpanishPaola Cépeda | pp. 5–19
- Chapter 2. Long-distance binding of French reflexive soi : First-person oriented logophoricityIsabelle Charnavel | pp. 21–34
- Chapter 3. French negative concord and discord: An experimental investigation of contextual and prosodic disambiguationViviane Déprez and Jeremy Yeaton | pp. 35–51
- Chapter 4. Dimensions of variation: The inflected construction in the dialect of Delia (Caltanissetta)Vincenzo Nicolò Di Caro and Giuliana Giusti | pp. 53–68
- Chapter 5. Ma non era rosso? (But wasn’t it red?): On counter-expectational questions in ItalianAlessandra Giorgi | pp. 69–84
- Chapter 6. Dime una cosa: Are wh-in-situ questions different in Spanish? Evidence from intonationCarolina González and Lara Reglero | pp. 85–102
- Chapter 7. Parametric comparison and dialect variation: Insights from Southern ItalyCristina Guardiano, Dimitris Michelioudakis, Guido Cordoni, Monica Alexandrina Irimia, Nina Radkevich and Ioanna Sitaridou | pp. 103–133
- Chapter 8. Morphological doublets in Brazilian Portuguese wh-constructionsMary A. Kato | pp. 135–152
- Chapter 9. Clitic doubling, person and agreement in French hyper-complex inversionRichard S. Kayne | pp. 153–184
- Chapter 10. Licensing conditions on null generic subjects in SpanishMatthew L. Maddox | pp. 185–199
- Chapter 11. Bridging and dislocation in CatalanLaia Mayol and Xavier Villalba | pp. 201–213
- Chapter 12. Dependent numerals and dependent existentials in RomanianMara Panaitescu | pp. 215–229
- Chapter 13. Stressed enclitics are not weak pronouns: A plea for allomorphyDiego Pescarini | pp. 231–244
- Chapter 14. Causativization of verbs of directed motion in Romance languagesAnna Pineda | pp. 245–262
- Chapter 15. Latin denominal deponents: A syntactic analysisFrancesco Pinzin | pp. 263–278
- Chapter 16. Against control by implicit passive agentsLisa A. Reed | pp. 279–292
- Chapter 17. Romance evaluative que/che/să sentences as inverted optativesCristina Sánchez López | pp. 293–307
- Chapter 18. Resumed phrases (are always moved, even with in-island resumption)Dominique Sportiche | pp. 309–324
- Chapter 19. Timing properties of (Brazilian) Portuguese and (European) SpanishIrene Vogel, Angeliki Athanasopoulou and Natália Brambatti Guzzo | pp. 325–340
- Index of terms
- Index of languages | pp. 341–342
Cited by (6)
Cited by six other publications
Delgado, Nerea
Garzonio, Jacopo, Enrico Castro & Jessica Rita Messina
Guardiano, Cristina, Michela Cambria & Vincenzo Stalfieri
Guardiano, Cristina & Melita Stavrou
Pescarini, Diego
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 3 december 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.