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On Linkhood, Topicalization and Clitic Left Dislocation
177
Citations
29
References
2002
Year
Morphology (Linguistics)SemanticsSyntactic StructureApplied LinguisticsSexual CulturesSyntaxGrammarCorpus AnalysisClitic Left DislocationLanguage StudiesGrammatical FormalismPragmaticsFeminist Medium StudyInformation PackagingRomance LanguagesInformation Packaging NotionFormal SyntaxLeft DislocationArtsLinguisticsTheoretical Linguistics
This paper focuses on the Information Packaging notion of linkhood and provides a structural definition of this notion for Greek. We show that a combination of structural resources – syntactic (left dislocation), morphological (clitic duplication) and phonological (absence of nuclear accent) – are simultaneously exploited to realize linkhood in Greek, a generalization that can be captured in a constraint-based grammar such as HPSG, which permits the expression of interface constraints. We assume Vallduví's (1992) approach to Information Packaging, and Engdahl & Vallduví's (1996) implementation of the latter in HPSG, but deviate from Vallduví's work in adopting Hendriks & Dekker's (1996) revised definition of linkhood that relies on non-monotone anaphora . From an empirical point of view, our approach directly accounts for the invariable association of Clitic Left Dislocated NPs with wide scope readings, as well as a number of systematic differences in felicity conditions between Clitic Left Dislocation and other apparently related phenomena (Topicalization and Clitic Doubling). From a theoretical perspective, our analysis departs from syntax-based notions of topichood or discourse-linking and supports a definition that unifies linkhood with other anaphora phenomena. As such, it arguably overcomes previously noted problems for Vallduví's treatment of links as the current-locus-of-update in a Heim-style file-card system.
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