Course Description
The focus of this course is on the syntax of long-distance dependencies, and in particular the proposal that all such dependencies are derived via a single grammatical operation, Agree. We aim to delimit basic properties of this operation with special reference to phi-Agree, clitic doubling, and movement. Empirical phenomena of special interest involve hierarchical agreement systems, PCC effects, negative concord, mixed A/A’ phenomena, and locality effects. Throughout the course, we will explore the extent to which these phenomena are well-modeled by the interaction/satisfaction theory of Agree, which allows for probes to be specified separately for the features they copy (interaction) versus the features that make probing stop (satisfaction).
Area Tags: Syntax, Morphology, Typology, Linguistic Frameworks
(Session 2) Tuesday/Friday 9:00-10:20
Location: ILC S140
Instructor: Amy Rose Deal
Amy Rose Deal is associate professor of linguistics at UC Berkeley and editor-in-chief of Natural Language Semantics. Her research addresses crosslinguistic variation in syntax and semantics.