The aim of this paper is to address two main counterarguments raised in Landau (2007) against the movement analysis of Control, and especially against the phenomenon of Backward Control. The paper shows that unlike the situation described in Tsez (Polinsky & Potsdam 2002), Landau's objections do not hold for Greek and Romanian, where all obligatory control verbs exhibit Backward Control. Our results thus provide stronger empirical support for a theoretical approach to Control in terms of Movement, as defended in Hornstein (1999 and subsequent work)
The aim of the present article is to deconstruct a specific line of argumentation used by Boeckx, Ho...
In an article in this journal, Boeckx & Hornstein (2006a) present data from Brazilian Portuguese (BP...
Control is an interpretational dependency between two argument positions in which the referential pr...
The aim of this paper is to address two main counterarguments raised in Landau (2007) against the mo...
I. Control = Movement (Hornstein 1999 and subsequent work): the difference between Control and Raisi...
This article documents and analyzes a pattern of backward subject control in the Nakh-Daghestanian l...
treats obligatory control as a special case of raising, subject to constraints on movement such as S...
This paper discusses syntactic, semantic and pragmatic properties of an Indonesian control construct...
This article discusses the challenges that Bobaljik and Landau (2009) pose to Boeckx and Hornstein`s...
This paper shows that neither of the two most obvious potential analyses of the Brazilian Portuguese...
In the Minimalist Program, movement is considered to be driven by feature checking. An element moves...
This is the second part of a two-part article that reviews a number of the current debates regarding...
This paper discusses two arguments raised against Hornstein`s (1999, 2001) Movement Theory of Contro...
This paper documents and analyzes an instance of covert A-movement, specifically covert subject-to-s...
In this paper we argue for a movement-based analysis of partial control following the ideas outlined...
The aim of the present article is to deconstruct a specific line of argumentation used by Boeckx, Ho...
In an article in this journal, Boeckx & Hornstein (2006a) present data from Brazilian Portuguese (BP...
Control is an interpretational dependency between two argument positions in which the referential pr...
The aim of this paper is to address two main counterarguments raised in Landau (2007) against the mo...
I. Control = Movement (Hornstein 1999 and subsequent work): the difference between Control and Raisi...
This article documents and analyzes a pattern of backward subject control in the Nakh-Daghestanian l...
treats obligatory control as a special case of raising, subject to constraints on movement such as S...
This paper discusses syntactic, semantic and pragmatic properties of an Indonesian control construct...
This article discusses the challenges that Bobaljik and Landau (2009) pose to Boeckx and Hornstein`s...
This paper shows that neither of the two most obvious potential analyses of the Brazilian Portuguese...
In the Minimalist Program, movement is considered to be driven by feature checking. An element moves...
This is the second part of a two-part article that reviews a number of the current debates regarding...
This paper discusses two arguments raised against Hornstein`s (1999, 2001) Movement Theory of Contro...
This paper documents and analyzes an instance of covert A-movement, specifically covert subject-to-s...
In this paper we argue for a movement-based analysis of partial control following the ideas outlined...
The aim of the present article is to deconstruct a specific line of argumentation used by Boeckx, Ho...
In an article in this journal, Boeckx & Hornstein (2006a) present data from Brazilian Portuguese (BP...
Control is an interpretational dependency between two argument positions in which the referential pr...