Journal Article10.1007/S10988-008-9040-3
Linearization-based word-part ellipsis
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TL;DR: A unified and general account of word-part ellipsis and phrasal ellipsi is proposed, in the framework of Head-Driven Phrase Structure Grammar, since the various levels of linguistic description are locally and simultaneously available.
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Abstract: This paper addresses a phenomenon in which certain word-parts can be omitted. The evidence shows that the full range of data cannot be captured by a sublexical analysis, since the phenomena can be observed both in phrasal and in lexical environments. It is argued that a form of deletion is involved, and that the phenomena—lexical or otherwise—are subject to the same phonological, semantic, and syntactic constraints. In the formalization that is proposed, all of the above constraints are cast in a parallel and declarative fashion, in the framework of Head-Driven Phrase Structure Grammar (Pollard and Sag Head-driven phrase structure grammar, 1994), since the various levels of linguistic description are locally and simultaneously available. Building on recent accounts of ellipsis, this paper proposes a unified and general account of word-part ellipsis and phrasal ellipsis.
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Citations
The indeterminacy of word segmentation and the nature of morphology and syntax
TL;DR: It is concluded that the authors do not currently have a good basis for dividing the domain of morphosyntax into morphology and syntax, and that linguists should be very careful with general claims that make crucial reference to a cross-linguistic ‘word’ notion.
490
•Book
The Oxford handbook of ellipsis
Jeroen Van Craenenbroeck,Tanja Temmerman +1 more
- 01 Jan 2019
TL;DR: The authors provide a comprehensive, in-depth, and balanced discussion of ellipsis phenomena, whereby a perceived interpretation is fuller than would be expected based solely on the presence of linguistic forms.
143
On the disunity of right-node raising phenomena: Extraposition, ellipsis, and deletion
TL;DR: It is proposed that what is usually called RNR is best seen as the conflation of three completely unrelated kinds of phenomena: VP/N′-ellipsis, extraposition, and (backward ) periphery deletion .
61
Word formation is syntactic: Raising in nominalizations
Benjamin Bruening,Benjamin Bruening +1 more
- 26 Sep 2018
TL;DR: The paper shows that one argument against syntactic accounts of nominalization does not go through, clearing the way for the most parsimonious type of theory: one with only one combinatorial component, not two distinct ones for phrases versus words.
58
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