This paper deals with the issue of Partial Control (PC), a phenomenon widely discussed in syntactic literature since (Landau 2000). PC constitutes a case of mismatch in semantic number between the controller (singular) and PRO (plural, including the reference set of the controller). We present a number of current proposals concerning the mechanics of PC set against the background of competition between the movement-based and Agree-based theories of control. In final sections we present new data from English and Polish showing Parasitic Partial Control (PPC), where a PC reading within the adjunct infinitive is conditioned by a PC reading in the complement infinitive clause. We believe that it is less problematic for movement-base control to ...
This paper deals with partial control, the phenomenon that instead of identity there is a subset rel...
Control, typically defined as a specific referential dependency between the null-subject of a non-fi...
The generative literature has often focused on the obligatory nature of complement control. This mea...
This paper discusses partial control, a notoriously intricate phenomenon. Brought to the linguistic ...
In this squib, we provide evidence that finite control languages like Greek and Romanian display par...
This chapter compares the partial/exhaustive control distinction in Russian, Icelandic and European ...
In this short paper, I present some arguments against the view of Partial Control as held within the...
In this paper, we discuss the results of the first large-scale experimental investigation of Partial...
The present investigation targets the phenomenon commonly called control. Many languages including G...
In this paper we argue for a movement-based analysis of partial control following the ideas outlined...
It is the aim of this paper to evaluate the various types of sentential complementation available in...
treats obligatory control as a special case of raising, subject to constraints on movement such as S...
Control constructions typically do not have an overt subject, the embedded clause typically does not...
This volume represents a collection of papers that present some of the results of two projects on co...
This paper provides a unified theory of controller choice and the availability of what Landau (2000)...
This paper deals with partial control, the phenomenon that instead of identity there is a subset rel...
Control, typically defined as a specific referential dependency between the null-subject of a non-fi...
The generative literature has often focused on the obligatory nature of complement control. This mea...
This paper discusses partial control, a notoriously intricate phenomenon. Brought to the linguistic ...
In this squib, we provide evidence that finite control languages like Greek and Romanian display par...
This chapter compares the partial/exhaustive control distinction in Russian, Icelandic and European ...
In this short paper, I present some arguments against the view of Partial Control as held within the...
In this paper, we discuss the results of the first large-scale experimental investigation of Partial...
The present investigation targets the phenomenon commonly called control. Many languages including G...
In this paper we argue for a movement-based analysis of partial control following the ideas outlined...
It is the aim of this paper to evaluate the various types of sentential complementation available in...
treats obligatory control as a special case of raising, subject to constraints on movement such as S...
Control constructions typically do not have an overt subject, the embedded clause typically does not...
This volume represents a collection of papers that present some of the results of two projects on co...
This paper provides a unified theory of controller choice and the availability of what Landau (2000)...
This paper deals with partial control, the phenomenon that instead of identity there is a subset rel...
Control, typically defined as a specific referential dependency between the null-subject of a non-fi...
The generative literature has often focused on the obligatory nature of complement control. This mea...