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Linguistics & Semiotics - General & Miscellaneous, Comparative Grammar
Why Agree? Why Move?: Unifying Agreement-Based and Discourse Configurational Languages by Shigeru Miyagawa — book cover

Why Agree? Why Move?: Unifying Agreement-Based and Discourse Configurational Languages

by Shigeru Miyagawa
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Overview

An unusual property of human language is the existence of movement operations. Modern syntactic theory from its inception has dealt with the puzzle of why movement should occur. In this monograph, Shigeru Miyagawa combines this question with another, that of the occurrence of agreement systems. Using data from a wide range of languages, he argues that movement and agreement work in tandem to achieve a specific goal: to imbue natural language with enormous expressive power. Without movement and agreement, he contends, human language would be merely a shadow of itself, with severe limitation on what can be expressed. Miyagawa investigates a variety of languages, including English, Japanese, Bantu languages, Romance languages, Finnish, and Chinese. He finds that every language manifests some kind of agreement, some in the form of the familiar person/number/gender system and others in the form of what Katalin É. Kiss calls "discourse configurational"features such as topic and focus. A key proposal of his argument is that the computational system in syntax deals with the wide range of agreement types uniformly—as if there were just one system—and an integral part of this computation turns out to be movement. Why Agree? Why Move? is unique in proposing a unified system for movement and agreement across language groups that are vastly diverse—Bantu languages, East Asian languages, Indo-European languages, and others.

Synopsis

An argument that not only do movement and agreement occur in every language, they also work in tandem to imbue natural language with enormous expressive power.

About the Author, Shigeru Miyagawa

Shigeru Miyagawa is Professor of Linguistics and Kochi-Manjiro Professor of Japanese Language and Culture at MIT. He is the author of Structure and Case Marking in Japanese and the coeditor of Oxford Handbook of Japanese Linguistics.

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Book Details

Published
December 1, 2009
Publisher
MIT Press
Pages
200
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780262513555

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