This thesis is dedicated to two strong island effects: The Subject Condition and The Adjunct Condition. Both effects can be unified under a single generalization, known as Condition on Extraction Domain, or CED (Cattell, 1976; Kayne, 1981; Huang, 1982): any maximal projection that is merged with a phrase is an island. The thesis develops the so-called Spell Out theory, based on the original proposal by Johnson (2003). This theory derives CED from two basic assumptions about when and to which constituent Spell Out is applied over the course of syntactic derivation. The assumptions are, first, that between any two phrasal sisters at least one must be spelled out, and second, that a spelled out phrase does not project its category. The thes...
In this paper, we present a unified feature-based theory of complement, adjunct, and subject extract...
In this paper I show how non-simultaneous spell-out can be employed as a derivational mechanism to e...
Adjunct islands (i.e., extraction from adjoined clauses) are considered to be islands for movement a...
This paper examines the connection between certain island phenomena for long distance movement, and ...
Extraction constraints on long-distance dependencies – so-called islands – have been the subject of ...
This paper focuses on the complex factors which render subject domains opaque to subextraction. Sub...
Thesis: Ph. D. in Linguistics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Linguistics and ...
Subjacency characterizes a set of phenomena whose acquisition must be explained by any proposal for ...
Syntactic island constraints are generally viewed as paradigmatic evidence for the autonomy of synta...
Recent research has highlighted a remarkable variability in subject island effects. Focusing on intr...
International audienceThis book presents a novel semantic account of weak, or selective, islands. We...
This paper provides an overview of categorical and gradient effects in islands, with a focus on Engl...
This paper proposes an analysis for CED effects on the basis of the Phase Impenetrability Condition ...
This paper discusses a family of restrictions on syntactic extraction, so-called wh-islands. The ana...
Abstract: In this paper, we test the Cumulative Effect proposed by Haegeman et al. (2014). In partic...
In this paper, we present a unified feature-based theory of complement, adjunct, and subject extract...
In this paper I show how non-simultaneous spell-out can be employed as a derivational mechanism to e...
Adjunct islands (i.e., extraction from adjoined clauses) are considered to be islands for movement a...
This paper examines the connection between certain island phenomena for long distance movement, and ...
Extraction constraints on long-distance dependencies – so-called islands – have been the subject of ...
This paper focuses on the complex factors which render subject domains opaque to subextraction. Sub...
Thesis: Ph. D. in Linguistics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Linguistics and ...
Subjacency characterizes a set of phenomena whose acquisition must be explained by any proposal for ...
Syntactic island constraints are generally viewed as paradigmatic evidence for the autonomy of synta...
Recent research has highlighted a remarkable variability in subject island effects. Focusing on intr...
International audienceThis book presents a novel semantic account of weak, or selective, islands. We...
This paper provides an overview of categorical and gradient effects in islands, with a focus on Engl...
This paper proposes an analysis for CED effects on the basis of the Phase Impenetrability Condition ...
This paper discusses a family of restrictions on syntactic extraction, so-called wh-islands. The ana...
Abstract: In this paper, we test the Cumulative Effect proposed by Haegeman et al. (2014). In partic...
In this paper, we present a unified feature-based theory of complement, adjunct, and subject extract...
In this paper I show how non-simultaneous spell-out can be employed as a derivational mechanism to e...
Adjunct islands (i.e., extraction from adjoined clauses) are considered to be islands for movement a...