Subjacency characterizes a set of phenomena whose acquisition must be explained by any proposal for human language learning. We take a broader perspective than previous responses to Ambridge, Pine, and Lieven (2014), arguing that they have not shown that this UG principle is ‘redundant’ because their proposed alternative does not take into account firmly established constraints on A-bar dependencies. We illustrate a range of challenges for theories hoping to reduce subjacency to independently motivated, primarily nonsyntactic constraints: they must include a way to account for attested crosslinguistic variation in island effects, the cross-construction generality of island effects, and the effects of resumption and of wh-in-situ on island b...
Recent research has highlighted a remarkable variability in subject island effects. Focusing on intr...
There exists a controversy in the literature and among the speakers of Slovenian concerning the gram...
The cause of island effects has evoked considerable debate within syntax and other fields of linguis...
Extraction constraints on long-distance dependencies – so-called islands – have been the subject of ...
This paper provides an overview of categorical and gradient effects in islands, with a focus on Engl...
Mainland Scandinavian languages have been reported to allow movement from embedded questions, relati...
This thesis is dedicated to two strong island effects: The Subject Condition and The Adjunct Conditi...
It is well-attested that native speakers tend to give low acceptability ratings to sentences that in...
We present a series of large-scale formal acceptability judgment studies that explored Norwegian isl...
Locality of movement has been a central concern in the history of generative grammar and has taken a...
We provide a formal framework for analyzing syntactic island effects from a subregular perspective. ...
International audienceThis book presents a novel semantic account of weak, or selective, islands. We...
Competence-based theories of island effects play a central role in generative grammar, yet the grade...
Norwegian allows filler-gap dependencies into relative clauses (RCs) and embedded questions (EQs) – ...
Sentences that are ungrammatical and yet intelligible are instances of what I call perfectly thinkab...
Recent research has highlighted a remarkable variability in subject island effects. Focusing on intr...
There exists a controversy in the literature and among the speakers of Slovenian concerning the gram...
The cause of island effects has evoked considerable debate within syntax and other fields of linguis...
Extraction constraints on long-distance dependencies – so-called islands – have been the subject of ...
This paper provides an overview of categorical and gradient effects in islands, with a focus on Engl...
Mainland Scandinavian languages have been reported to allow movement from embedded questions, relati...
This thesis is dedicated to two strong island effects: The Subject Condition and The Adjunct Conditi...
It is well-attested that native speakers tend to give low acceptability ratings to sentences that in...
We present a series of large-scale formal acceptability judgment studies that explored Norwegian isl...
Locality of movement has been a central concern in the history of generative grammar and has taken a...
We provide a formal framework for analyzing syntactic island effects from a subregular perspective. ...
International audienceThis book presents a novel semantic account of weak, or selective, islands. We...
Competence-based theories of island effects play a central role in generative grammar, yet the grade...
Norwegian allows filler-gap dependencies into relative clauses (RCs) and embedded questions (EQs) – ...
Sentences that are ungrammatical and yet intelligible are instances of what I call perfectly thinkab...
Recent research has highlighted a remarkable variability in subject island effects. Focusing on intr...
There exists a controversy in the literature and among the speakers of Slovenian concerning the gram...
The cause of island effects has evoked considerable debate within syntax and other fields of linguis...