This paper proposes a new model for null subjects, and focuses on its implications for language development. The literature on pro-drop generally considers that not allowing null subjects is, informally speaking, the "default" option in natural languages, and appeals to particular morphosyntactic mechanisms in order to account for those languages in which the subject can be omitted. Shifting the perspective, the inverse approach postulates that pro-drop is (almost) a default grammatical setting, and that non-pro-drop results from the intervention of independent factors that block pro-drop in the derivation. The paper explores the consequences of the inverse approach in the domain of language acquisition, arguing that this model allows to ac...
The present paper examines the correlation between the pro-drop parameter and rich verbal morphology...
In this paper, we investigate the production of Null Subjects by three groups of children: monolingu...
With the advent of the Minimalist Program (Chomsky 1995), the prevailing view of linguistic variatio...
This paper proposes a new model for null subjects, and focuses on its implications for language deve...
This paper proposes a new model for null subjects, and focuses on its implications for language deve...
Recent developments within the so-called Principles and Parameters model of acquisition argue for a ...
In this paper, we investigate the production of Null Subjects by three groups of children: monolingu...
In this paper, we present new evidence showing that some of the empty subjects produced by young chi...
This paper concerns the null subject phenomenon attested in abbreviated written registers in English...
This chapter offers an up-to-date discussion of the multiple issues raised by the null-subjectt phen...
This chapter offers an up-to-date discussion of the multiple issues raised by the null-subjectt phen...
This chapter offers an up-to-date discussion of the multiple issues raised by the null-subjectt phen...
[EN] This article investigates the question of the licensing of null arguments in the so-called pro-...
This paper presents data and analysis relating to null subjects in spoken colloquial En...
Evidence for null subject transfer in early L2 acquisition has come almost exclusively from grammati...
The present paper examines the correlation between the pro-drop parameter and rich verbal morphology...
In this paper, we investigate the production of Null Subjects by three groups of children: monolingu...
With the advent of the Minimalist Program (Chomsky 1995), the prevailing view of linguistic variatio...
This paper proposes a new model for null subjects, and focuses on its implications for language deve...
This paper proposes a new model for null subjects, and focuses on its implications for language deve...
Recent developments within the so-called Principles and Parameters model of acquisition argue for a ...
In this paper, we investigate the production of Null Subjects by three groups of children: monolingu...
In this paper, we present new evidence showing that some of the empty subjects produced by young chi...
This paper concerns the null subject phenomenon attested in abbreviated written registers in English...
This chapter offers an up-to-date discussion of the multiple issues raised by the null-subjectt phen...
This chapter offers an up-to-date discussion of the multiple issues raised by the null-subjectt phen...
This chapter offers an up-to-date discussion of the multiple issues raised by the null-subjectt phen...
[EN] This article investigates the question of the licensing of null arguments in the so-called pro-...
This paper presents data and analysis relating to null subjects in spoken colloquial En...
Evidence for null subject transfer in early L2 acquisition has come almost exclusively from grammati...
The present paper examines the correlation between the pro-drop parameter and rich verbal morphology...
In this paper, we investigate the production of Null Subjects by three groups of children: monolingu...
With the advent of the Minimalist Program (Chomsky 1995), the prevailing view of linguistic variatio...