The author presents evidence from Kiswahili supporting a head-raising analysis recently proposed in Kayne (1994) and Bianchi (1999), in which the relative clause is generated as a complement of the determiner. Three kinds of evidence are presented: (1) selectional relations between demonstratives and some relative clauses; (2) quantified noun phrase-pronoun binding, in which the bound pronoun appears inside the head of the relative clause while its binder is located in the relative clause; and (3) relativization of objects comprising part of idiomatic expressions. The evidence supports both the head-raising hypothesis and the determiner complementation hypothesis
This article studies two aspects of movement in relative clauses, focusing on evidence from Nez Perc...
The present article documents the presence in a number of languages and language families (as well a...
Demuth and Harford (1999) contend that in Bantu relatives, the verb raises from I-C if the relative ...
This paper brings together two disparate strands of research in the literature on relative clauses (...
[[abstract]]This thesis discusses the relative constructions in Saysiyat and the derivations. Relati...
The purpose of this dissertation is to bring under investigation two of the three relative clause st...
This paper provides a systematic descriptive account of relative clause constructions (RCCs) of Nkam...
After an overview of Swahili's linguistic situation and a basic description of its nominal morpholog...
This thesis establishes the syntactic representation and derivation of relative clause (RC) construc...
Several studies explain the variation of the Swahili relative clause (RC) from a syntactic perspecti...
The aim of this paper is to propose and motivate an analysis for internally headed relative clauses ...
A relative clause is a clause that modifies a noun, and thus, it has an adjectival function. The nou...
250 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2006.This thesis is concerned with...
Within the field of linguistics, the makeup of the Complementizer Phrase (CP) layer of the clause ha...
International audienceTilapa Otomi (Oto-Manguean; Oto-Pamean; Otomian) has three types of relative c...
This article studies two aspects of movement in relative clauses, focusing on evidence from Nez Perc...
The present article documents the presence in a number of languages and language families (as well a...
Demuth and Harford (1999) contend that in Bantu relatives, the verb raises from I-C if the relative ...
This paper brings together two disparate strands of research in the literature on relative clauses (...
[[abstract]]This thesis discusses the relative constructions in Saysiyat and the derivations. Relati...
The purpose of this dissertation is to bring under investigation two of the three relative clause st...
This paper provides a systematic descriptive account of relative clause constructions (RCCs) of Nkam...
After an overview of Swahili's linguistic situation and a basic description of its nominal morpholog...
This thesis establishes the syntactic representation and derivation of relative clause (RC) construc...
Several studies explain the variation of the Swahili relative clause (RC) from a syntactic perspecti...
The aim of this paper is to propose and motivate an analysis for internally headed relative clauses ...
A relative clause is a clause that modifies a noun, and thus, it has an adjectival function. The nou...
250 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2006.This thesis is concerned with...
Within the field of linguistics, the makeup of the Complementizer Phrase (CP) layer of the clause ha...
International audienceTilapa Otomi (Oto-Manguean; Oto-Pamean; Otomian) has three types of relative c...
This article studies two aspects of movement in relative clauses, focusing on evidence from Nez Perc...
The present article documents the presence in a number of languages and language families (as well a...
Demuth and Harford (1999) contend that in Bantu relatives, the verb raises from I-C if the relative ...