The most recent trend in the studies of LF intervention effects makes crucial reference to focusing effects on the interveners, and this paper critically examines the representative analyses of the focus-based approach. While each analysis has its own merits and shortcomings, I argue that a pragmatic analysis that does not make appeal to syntactic configurations is better equipped to deal with many of the complex and delicate facts surrounding intervention effects
This article deals with the phenomenon of Focus Fronting and addresses the vexed question of its opt...
This paper discusses focus ambiguities caused with Japanese focus particles, such as -sae ‘even’ and...
This paper investigates the roles of focus, arguing that such a notion is too wide and can be applie...
Many languages exhibit what have come to be known as ‘LF intervention effects’, in which a certain c...
In this talk, I will review some of the recent analyses of LF intervention effects (and to some exte...
The exploration on wh-intervention effects generally suffers from distributional variations. For exa...
The second meeting of the McGill whenthusiasts, Winter 2008. 1 The pragmatic proposal from Tomioka (...
This dissertation investigates how interpretations are differentiated between and within Japanese fo...
In this paper, I present an explicit analysis of association with focus in Japanese. The proposed fo...
This paper presents an alternative approach to intervention effects by arguing that intervention eff...
[[abstract]]This study starts out from a re-investigation into the issue of covert wh- movement wit...
Focus is regularly treated as a cross-linguistically stable category that is merely manifested by di...
LF Intervention Effects and Nominative Objects in Japanese This paper provides new data to tease apa...
In a recent article, Li & Law (to appear) argue that focus intervention is a manifestation of in...
A growing number of task studies have examined which tasks provide increased focus in language forms...
This article deals with the phenomenon of Focus Fronting and addresses the vexed question of its opt...
This paper discusses focus ambiguities caused with Japanese focus particles, such as -sae ‘even’ and...
This paper investigates the roles of focus, arguing that such a notion is too wide and can be applie...
Many languages exhibit what have come to be known as ‘LF intervention effects’, in which a certain c...
In this talk, I will review some of the recent analyses of LF intervention effects (and to some exte...
The exploration on wh-intervention effects generally suffers from distributional variations. For exa...
The second meeting of the McGill whenthusiasts, Winter 2008. 1 The pragmatic proposal from Tomioka (...
This dissertation investigates how interpretations are differentiated between and within Japanese fo...
In this paper, I present an explicit analysis of association with focus in Japanese. The proposed fo...
This paper presents an alternative approach to intervention effects by arguing that intervention eff...
[[abstract]]This study starts out from a re-investigation into the issue of covert wh- movement wit...
Focus is regularly treated as a cross-linguistically stable category that is merely manifested by di...
LF Intervention Effects and Nominative Objects in Japanese This paper provides new data to tease apa...
In a recent article, Li & Law (to appear) argue that focus intervention is a manifestation of in...
A growing number of task studies have examined which tasks provide increased focus in language forms...
This article deals with the phenomenon of Focus Fronting and addresses the vexed question of its opt...
This paper discusses focus ambiguities caused with Japanese focus particles, such as -sae ‘even’ and...
This paper investigates the roles of focus, arguing that such a notion is too wide and can be applie...