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Wackernagel's law in fifth-century Greek

Posted on:2011-01-07Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of California, BerkeleyCandidate:Goldstein, David MichaelFull Text:PDF
GTID:1445390002965101Subject:Language
Abstract/Summary:
This dissertation investigates the distribution of the pronominal clitics and the modal particle , a&d12; n in fifth-century Greek (more specifically in Herodotus, the tragedians, and Aristophanes), which is typically assumed to be governed by Wackernagel's Law. It argues for a prosody-dominant model of clitic distribution, according to which the position of a clitic is conditioned primarily by prosodic domain, and only secondarily by syntactic domain: clitics typically select for a host at the left edge of an intonational phrase. From here I then pursue the deeper question of what factors are responsible for the mapping of a constituent (or sub-constituent) onto an intonational phrase. I examine preposed phrases, participial phrases, and infinitival clauses, to present a dossier of the pragmatic and semantic meanings that induce intonational-phrase coding, and in turn shape clitic distribution.
Keywords/Search Tags:Distribution, Clitic
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