This dissertation investigates the properties of a particular type of question, namely wh-in-situ questions in French. It examines their properties from two perspectives related to the context in which a question is uttered. These are (a) the information structure of the sentence, specifically focus and givenness, and (b) the distinction between regular information seeking questions and echo questions.An important result is the insight that French has two mechanisms to interpret wh-in-situ questions, yielding potentially identical looking questions with different properties. While certain speakers only have one of these mechanisms to interpret wh-in-situ questions in their grammar, others, often younger speakers, have both. This explains mu...
This paper offers a qualitative and quantitative analysis of French and Italian wh-in situ questions...
textAn intriguing aspect of the French language is its complex system of interrogative structures; t...
Abstract: This article examines French wh-in-situ. We argue that wh-in-situ in French is licensed by...
This study compares the prosodic properties of French wh-in-situ echo questions and string-identical...
This article addresses the question of wh- questions French and the link betweensyntax and pragmatic...
As opposed to English, French wh-questions can take a wide variety of forms. I identify four basic p...
As opposed to English, French wh-questions can take a wide variety of forms. I identify four basic p...
In the last five decades, French wh in-situ has been the center of much work in theoretical linguist...
The aim of this paper is to corroborate the assumption of syntactic optio-nality for French wh-quest...
This paper addresses the debate on the existence of specifically syntactic restrictions on one of a ...
The aim of this paper is to corroborate the assumption of syntactic optionality for French wh-questi...
International audienceThe current experiment addresses the proposal by Cheng and Rooryk (2000) that ...
French information-seeking questions are unusual in that the wh-word (question word) may appear in t...
This article addresses claims that French children produce more wh-in situ questions than adults, an...
We present experimental evidence bearing on Cheng and Rooryck’s (2000) proposal that French wh-in-si...
This paper offers a qualitative and quantitative analysis of French and Italian wh-in situ questions...
textAn intriguing aspect of the French language is its complex system of interrogative structures; t...
Abstract: This article examines French wh-in-situ. We argue that wh-in-situ in French is licensed by...
This study compares the prosodic properties of French wh-in-situ echo questions and string-identical...
This article addresses the question of wh- questions French and the link betweensyntax and pragmatic...
As opposed to English, French wh-questions can take a wide variety of forms. I identify four basic p...
As opposed to English, French wh-questions can take a wide variety of forms. I identify four basic p...
In the last five decades, French wh in-situ has been the center of much work in theoretical linguist...
The aim of this paper is to corroborate the assumption of syntactic optio-nality for French wh-quest...
This paper addresses the debate on the existence of specifically syntactic restrictions on one of a ...
The aim of this paper is to corroborate the assumption of syntactic optionality for French wh-questi...
International audienceThe current experiment addresses the proposal by Cheng and Rooryk (2000) that ...
French information-seeking questions are unusual in that the wh-word (question word) may appear in t...
This article addresses claims that French children produce more wh-in situ questions than adults, an...
We present experimental evidence bearing on Cheng and Rooryck’s (2000) proposal that French wh-in-si...
This paper offers a qualitative and quantitative analysis of French and Italian wh-in situ questions...
textAn intriguing aspect of the French language is its complex system of interrogative structures; t...
Abstract: This article examines French wh-in-situ. We argue that wh-in-situ in French is licensed by...