This paper argues that French Left-Dislocation is a unified phenomenon whether it is resumed by a clitic or a non-clitic element. The syntactic component is shown to play a minimal role in its derivation: all that is required is that the dislocated element be merged by adjunction to a Discourse Projection (generally a finite TP with root properties). No agreement or checking of a topic feature is necessary, hence no syntactic movement of any sort need be postulated. The so-called resumptive element is argued to be a full-fledged pronoun rather than a true syntactic resumptive
National audienceIn this paper, I try to show that, contrary to what one might think, left dislocati...
In this paper, structural and syntactic properties of left dislocation as topics in French and Norwe...
In Italian, topics may appear in left- or right-dislocated position and are doubled by clause-intern...
This paper revisits the classic tests for movement that have been proposed in the literature on disl...
The pervasive use of dislocations (as in Le chocolat, c’est bon) is a key characteristic of spoken F...
Raffaele Simone: Une interprétation diachronique de la "dislocation à droite" dans les langues roman...
In this study, I use conversational data from PAC and PFC corpora to compare the use and properties ...
International audienceThe aim of this study is to discuss the hypothesis according to which prosodic...
The analysis, based on a 300.000 words corpus of newspaper articles published online1, aims at defin...
Romance languages make use of syntactic topicalization strategies to mark various kinds of topic con...
The phenomenon of clitic left dislocation is relatively frequent in French and is traditionally rela...
National audienceIn this paper we analyse the contexts in which left and right dislocations appear. ...
It isshown that focalisation and topicalisation do not result from the inversion or detachment or di...
Romance languages make use of topicalisation as a grammatical strategy to mark [-focus] constituents...
Cette thèse s’intéresse à la description didactique de la variation linguistique dans une approche à...
National audienceIn this paper, I try to show that, contrary to what one might think, left dislocati...
In this paper, structural and syntactic properties of left dislocation as topics in French and Norwe...
In Italian, topics may appear in left- or right-dislocated position and are doubled by clause-intern...
This paper revisits the classic tests for movement that have been proposed in the literature on disl...
The pervasive use of dislocations (as in Le chocolat, c’est bon) is a key characteristic of spoken F...
Raffaele Simone: Une interprétation diachronique de la "dislocation à droite" dans les langues roman...
In this study, I use conversational data from PAC and PFC corpora to compare the use and properties ...
International audienceThe aim of this study is to discuss the hypothesis according to which prosodic...
The analysis, based on a 300.000 words corpus of newspaper articles published online1, aims at defin...
Romance languages make use of syntactic topicalization strategies to mark various kinds of topic con...
The phenomenon of clitic left dislocation is relatively frequent in French and is traditionally rela...
National audienceIn this paper we analyse the contexts in which left and right dislocations appear. ...
It isshown that focalisation and topicalisation do not result from the inversion or detachment or di...
Romance languages make use of topicalisation as a grammatical strategy to mark [-focus] constituents...
Cette thèse s’intéresse à la description didactique de la variation linguistique dans une approche à...
National audienceIn this paper, I try to show that, contrary to what one might think, left dislocati...
In this paper, structural and syntactic properties of left dislocation as topics in French and Norwe...
In Italian, topics may appear in left- or right-dislocated position and are doubled by clause-intern...