According to the Canonical Binding Theory (Chomsky 1981), anaphors must be bound in their local domain and pronominals must be free. The discovery of “long-distance anaphors” (e.g. Thrainsson 1976, Giorgi 1984), which violate the locality condition, induced the search for independent criteria. Giorgi (1984:310) proposed a widely adopted criterion: “pronouns can have split antecedents and anaphors cannot”. Recent minimalist binding theories derive this property of anaphors from the way a dependency on the antecedent is established which makes it intrinsic to binding. However, this leads to an important problem, since some languages have elements that i) may be locally bound and, hence, look like anaphors; yet ii) allow split antecedents whic...
The purpose of this study is to account for the binding properties of English anaphors within the Mi...
The ultimate goal of this paper is to show that binding can be captured in terms of Merge and Transf...
This paper argues in favor of using a set of Gricean maxims to account for preferred interpretations...
According to the Canonical Binding Theory (Chomsky 1981), anaphors must be bound in their local doma...
According to the Canonical Binding Theory (Chomsky 1981), anaphors must be bound in their local doma...
This thesis develops an analysis of the binding theory within the Minimalist approach to the archite...
This paper deals with long-distance anaphora, a binding phenomenon in which reflexives find their an...
An analysis of long-distance anaphora, a binding phenomenon in which reflexives find their anteceden...
Principle A of the Binding Theory states that an anaphor must be A-bound in the local domain contain...
Traditional binding theory is largely incompatible with minimalist assumptions. In this paper I prop...
A distribution of anaphoric elements roughly like that found in English occurs in languages around t...
This paper proposes a distinct approach to local binding effects for reflexives and pronominals in E...
This thesis is a study of syntactic constraints on the distribution and interpretation of the Russia...
This thesis is a study of syntactic constraints on the distribution and interpretation of the Russia...
In this paper we argue that the Korean anaphor caki-casin, taken thus far to be a local anaphor, can...
The purpose of this study is to account for the binding properties of English anaphors within the Mi...
The ultimate goal of this paper is to show that binding can be captured in terms of Merge and Transf...
This paper argues in favor of using a set of Gricean maxims to account for preferred interpretations...
According to the Canonical Binding Theory (Chomsky 1981), anaphors must be bound in their local doma...
According to the Canonical Binding Theory (Chomsky 1981), anaphors must be bound in their local doma...
This thesis develops an analysis of the binding theory within the Minimalist approach to the archite...
This paper deals with long-distance anaphora, a binding phenomenon in which reflexives find their an...
An analysis of long-distance anaphora, a binding phenomenon in which reflexives find their anteceden...
Principle A of the Binding Theory states that an anaphor must be A-bound in the local domain contain...
Traditional binding theory is largely incompatible with minimalist assumptions. In this paper I prop...
A distribution of anaphoric elements roughly like that found in English occurs in languages around t...
This paper proposes a distinct approach to local binding effects for reflexives and pronominals in E...
This thesis is a study of syntactic constraints on the distribution and interpretation of the Russia...
This thesis is a study of syntactic constraints on the distribution and interpretation of the Russia...
In this paper we argue that the Korean anaphor caki-casin, taken thus far to be a local anaphor, can...
The purpose of this study is to account for the binding properties of English anaphors within the Mi...
The ultimate goal of this paper is to show that binding can be captured in terms of Merge and Transf...
This paper argues in favor of using a set of Gricean maxims to account for preferred interpretations...