The Japanese inchoative-lexical causative pair poses an interesting problem for the Minimalist Program – how should the lexical causative and the syntactic causative be structurally represented and theoretically accounted for? The lexical causative verb and the syntactic causative verb formed by suffixing the syntactic causative morpheme sase onto the inchoative counterpart are both single causative constructions that are semantically similar. Yet, they differ in some ways, most significantly in their clausality – the lexical causative is monoclausal in nature while the syntactic causative is biclausal, comparable to English biclausal constructions formed with let or force. This paper investigates how this difference can be represented by i...
This chapter represents a new development in the studies on L2 Japanese in so far as, first, it upda...
This dissertation explores the mechanisms behind the linguistic expression of causation in English, ...
Linguistics of the early 20th century used to deny the paradigmatic aspect of syntax thus restrictin...
In this paper, I present a unified treatment of the three different types of Japanese causatives, th...
Japanese-speaking children erroneously produce intransitive forms instead of (di)transitive forms, a...
This paper presents yet another argument for the view that both the causative and in-choative verbs ...
In this paper we take a fresh look at an old problem, the syntax and semantics of Japanese causative...
In this paper we take a fresh look at an old problem, the syntax and semantics of Japanese causative...
Contrary to most syntactic theories which adopt hierarchical constituency structure as a self-eviden...
Contrary to most syntactic theories which adopt hierarchical constituency structure as a self-eviden...
The so-called sa-ire 'sa-insertion' refers to a morphological change in progress in Japanese humble ...
Based on the scope of negation in Japanese, the dissertation establishes a generalization that all v...
The Japanese causative verb exhibits the effects of blocking, whereby a causative verb (V-sase) is b...
This paper will be concerned with determining the existence or non-existence of a VP node in Japanes...
In this thesis, I propose a syntactic structure for verbs which directly encodes their event complex...
This chapter represents a new development in the studies on L2 Japanese in so far as, first, it upda...
This dissertation explores the mechanisms behind the linguistic expression of causation in English, ...
Linguistics of the early 20th century used to deny the paradigmatic aspect of syntax thus restrictin...
In this paper, I present a unified treatment of the three different types of Japanese causatives, th...
Japanese-speaking children erroneously produce intransitive forms instead of (di)transitive forms, a...
This paper presents yet another argument for the view that both the causative and in-choative verbs ...
In this paper we take a fresh look at an old problem, the syntax and semantics of Japanese causative...
In this paper we take a fresh look at an old problem, the syntax and semantics of Japanese causative...
Contrary to most syntactic theories which adopt hierarchical constituency structure as a self-eviden...
Contrary to most syntactic theories which adopt hierarchical constituency structure as a self-eviden...
The so-called sa-ire 'sa-insertion' refers to a morphological change in progress in Japanese humble ...
Based on the scope of negation in Japanese, the dissertation establishes a generalization that all v...
The Japanese causative verb exhibits the effects of blocking, whereby a causative verb (V-sase) is b...
This paper will be concerned with determining the existence or non-existence of a VP node in Japanes...
In this thesis, I propose a syntactic structure for verbs which directly encodes their event complex...
This chapter represents a new development in the studies on L2 Japanese in so far as, first, it upda...
This dissertation explores the mechanisms behind the linguistic expression of causation in English, ...
Linguistics of the early 20th century used to deny the paradigmatic aspect of syntax thus restrictin...