• Title of article

    Locus and limits of syntactic microvariation

  • Author/Authors

    Sjef Barbiers، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
  • Pages
    17
  • From page
    1607
  • To page
    1623
  • Abstract
    A central hypothesis of the Minimalist Program is that syntactic principles are constant across languages. Apparent syntactic variation would be reducible to variation in the lexicon, in particular variation in morphosyntactic features, and variation at the level of phonological interpretation (PF), in particular in the way syntactic structure is spelled out. This hypothesis invites large-scale microcomparative syntactic research, as minor morphosyntactic differences between closely related language varieties are expected to cause syntactic variation, such as variation in word order. In this paper, the hypothesis is tested against the data of the Syntactic Atlas of the Dutch Dialects (SAND), a project in which over 100 syntactic variables in 267 dialects of Dutch were investigated. In four case studies, involving complementizer drop, one-insertion, strong reflexives and doubling in Wh-chains, it is shown that most of syntactic variation can indeed be reduced to lexicon and PF, but that there is a residue of variation in the syntactic module concerning the size of the constituents that are copied in movement operations. Two further conclusions are that syntax plays a role in the lexicon in that it determines the limits of lexical variation and that part of syntactic variation must be explained by language-external factors.
  • Keywords
    Modularity , Strong reflexives , Complementizer drop , Wh-doubling , Microcomparative syntax , one-insertion
  • Journal title
    Lingua(International Review of General Linguistics)
  • Serial Year
    2009
  • Journal title
    Lingua(International Review of General Linguistics)
  • Record number

    1290807