1st Edition

The Clausal Structure of Spanish A Comparative Study

By Francisco Ordonez Copyright 2000

    This work studies various aspects of word order and clause structure in Spanish that have proved problematic for syntactic theory. These aspects are explored theoretically in light of the antisymmetry approach of Kayne (1994) and empirically by examining parallel structures in related languages. For example, the author uses antisymmetry to critique the traditional understanding of post-verbal subjects, which have assumed a right-adjunction approach. However, he provides empirical as well as theoretical reasons to believe that a combination of leftward movements constitutes a better alternative. Likewise, the study uses a number of combined theoretical and empirical arguments to provide new and more constrained analyses of overt wh -movement and pre-verbal subjects. It shows that the obligatory post-verbal positioning of overt subjects cannot be explained by recourse to a required overt head movement of the verb. Instead, the author explains this restriction by proposing that overt subjects, which are always topicalized in Spanish, conflict with the feature specifications of wh -complementizers. Finally, the author relates the obligatory topicalized nature of pre-verbal subjects in Spanish to a proposal that person agreement morphemes on the verb should be considered arguments that receive the subject theta-role. This book will be of interest to syntacticians and comparitivists, as well as scholars of Romance languages.

    Acknowledgements; 1. Introduction; Framework: antisymmetry; Background: hierarchical structure and linear order; Some Inadequacies of the Symmetric View; Spec Head Complement as Universal Order; The Formulation of the LCA; LCA and its consequences; 2. The VSO/VOS Alternation in Spanish; Introduction; the VSO and VOS order in Spanish; The analysis of VSO and VOS; The asymmetries; Binding; Conclusion; 3. Focus and Post-Verbal Subjects in Romance; Introduction; Distribution of Post-verbal subjects in Italian, Catalan and French; Distribution of post-verbal subjects in Spanish; Post-verbal subjects in Neutral Phrase; Post-verbal subjects in Focus Phrase; Proposal: LPR with Post-verbal subjects; Consequences for nonarguments; Consequences for arguments; Spanish VOS order; Comparing LPR to the right adjunction alternative; Conclusion; 4. Inversion in Interrogatives in Spanish and Catalan; Introduction; Antisymmetry and the landing of clitics; The position of the post-verbal subjects in interrogatives; V-to-C and the free inversion construction; Piedmontese; The obligatoriness of inversion in Interrogatives in Spanish and Catalan; Conclusion; Appendix Left Dislocated Subjects and Pro-Drop Introduction; Empirical Evidence; Dislocated subjects. Previous accounts; person Agreement as a clitic; Conclusion; References; Index.

    Biography

    Francisco Ordonez

    "It provides a highly stimulating discussion of many issues relating to Romance syntax and contains new, provocative analyses." -- Kleanthes K. Grohmann, University of Frankfurt