Symmetrizing Syntax

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A01=Hiroki Narita
A01=Naoki Fukui
Author_Hiroki Narita
Author_Naoki Fukui
Bare Phrase Structure
Category=CF
Category=CFK
Comp
Comparative Syntax
Compositional Interpretation
Endocentric and exocentric
EPP
eq_bestseller
eq_dictionaries-language-reference
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Eventual Unification
Externally Merged
feature checking
generative grammar
Human Language
Lca
linguistic universals
Minimal Search
morphological agreement
Multiple Subject Construction
Narrow Syntax
Null Expletive
OCC
phase theory
Pic
semantics
Sideward Movement
Spec Head Agreement
Spec Head Configuration
Strong Minimalist Thesis
structural conversion
structural symmetry in language
Subject XP
Symmetrizing Syntax
Symmetry Principle
syntactic movement
Theoretical comparative syntax
Trace Invisibility
Unbounded Merge
Unique Labeling
Vice Versa

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138944435
  • Weight: 660g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Nov 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Symmetrizing Syntax seeks to establish a minimal and natural characterization of the structure of human language (syntax), simplifying many facets of it that have been redundantly or asymmetrically formulated.

Virtually all past theories of natural language syntax, from the traditional X-bar theory to the contemporary system of Merge and labeling, stipulate that every phrase structure is "asymmetrically" organized, so that one of its elements is always marked as primary/dominant over the others, or each and every phrase is labeled by a designated lexical element. The two authors call this traditional stipulation into question and hypothesize, instead, that linguistic derivations are essentially driven by the need to reduce asymmetry and generate symmetric structures. Various linguistic notions such as Merge, cyclic derivation by phase, feature-checking, morphological agreement, labeling, movement, and criterial freezing, as well as parametric differences among languages like English and Japanese, and so on, are all shown to follow from a particular notion of structural symmetry. These results constitute novel support for the contemporary thesis that human language is essentially an instance of a physical/biological object, and its design is governed by the laws of nature, at the core of which lies the fundamental principle of symmetry.

Providing insights into new technical concepts in syntax, the volume is written for academics in linguistics but will also be accessible to linguistics students seeking an introduction to syntax.

Hiroki Narita is Associate Professor of Linguistics at Tokai University, Kanagawa, Japan.

Naoki Fukui is Professor of Linguistics at Sophia University, Tokyo, Japan.

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