The Ling Space | How Do We Put Clauses Inside Other Clauses? Complementizer Phrases @thelingspace | Uploaded 7 years ago | Updated 3 hours ago
How do sentences fit inside other sentences? Where can we put words like "that", "whether", and "if"? In this week's episode, we take a look at complementizer phrases: what exactly they are, how they account for embedded sentences and questions, and what they can let us do to capture word order in languages like German and Dutch.
This is Topic #86!
This week's tag language: Tok Pisin!
Related videos:
A Clause for Celebration: A History of Syntactic Clauses - youtu.be/980meOhBGR8
Topic of Focus: Information Structure - youtu.be/gZ6o8yFvJYI
Last episode:
Building Baby Trees: The Stages of Child Syntax - youtu.be/zmghbKNiI1k
Other of our syntax videos:
Just in Case: Case Theory and Where We Can Put Nouns - youtu.be/8Xi81H80J-w
Mark of Possession: Determiners, Nouns, and the DP Hypothesis - youtu.be/gWy7QdZJg9E
Desert Island Words: Islands and Where You Can't Move - youtu.be/01uH4XfJx3g
Our website also has extra content about this week's topic, discussing the nuts and bolts of how embedded clauses work, at: http://www.thelingspace.com/episode-86
Find us on all the social media worlds:
Tumblr: http://thelingspace.tumblr.com
Twitter: http://twitter.com/TheLingSpace
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/thelingspace
And at our website, http://www.thelingspace.com !
You can also find our store at the website, thelingspace.storenvy.com
We also have forums to discuss this episode, and linguistics more generally.
Sources:
Most of the information for this episode came from Andrew McIntyre's short online syntax textbook (https://www.angl.hu-berlin.de/department/staff/1685901/unterrichtsmaterialien/fundamental-engl-syntax-2014-online-einseitig.pdf), David Adger's Core Syntax (which also talks about German), and Andrew Carnie's Syntax: A Generative Introduction (2nd Edition). There's also a good set of slides on the topic at http://www1.pu.edu.tw/~jason/UMS_i(DPs,%20CPs,%20NegPs%20&%20TPs).pdf .
For the German section, we used this handout by Sten Vikner: http://www.hum.au.dk/engelsk/engsv/handouts/vikner-ho-2016-V2-cP-CP-Cambridge.pdf
And there are more examples taken from the following:
http://switchll.net/papers/2013AFLAhandout.pdf
http://gagl.eldoc.ub.rug.nl/FILES/root/1999-43/03/GAGL-43-1999-03.pdf
degruyter.com/view/product/19650
Looking forward to next time!
How do sentences fit inside other sentences? Where can we put words like "that", "whether", and "if"? In this week's episode, we take a look at complementizer phrases: what exactly they are, how they account for embedded sentences and questions, and what they can let us do to capture word order in languages like German and Dutch.
This is Topic #86!
This week's tag language: Tok Pisin!
Related videos:
A Clause for Celebration: A History of Syntactic Clauses - youtu.be/980meOhBGR8
Topic of Focus: Information Structure - youtu.be/gZ6o8yFvJYI
Last episode:
Building Baby Trees: The Stages of Child Syntax - youtu.be/zmghbKNiI1k
Other of our syntax videos:
Just in Case: Case Theory and Where We Can Put Nouns - youtu.be/8Xi81H80J-w
Mark of Possession: Determiners, Nouns, and the DP Hypothesis - youtu.be/gWy7QdZJg9E
Desert Island Words: Islands and Where You Can't Move - youtu.be/01uH4XfJx3g
Our website also has extra content about this week's topic, discussing the nuts and bolts of how embedded clauses work, at: http://www.thelingspace.com/episode-86
Find us on all the social media worlds:
Tumblr: http://thelingspace.tumblr.com
Twitter: http://twitter.com/TheLingSpace
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/thelingspace
And at our website, http://www.thelingspace.com !
You can also find our store at the website, thelingspace.storenvy.com
We also have forums to discuss this episode, and linguistics more generally.
Sources:
Most of the information for this episode came from Andrew McIntyre's short online syntax textbook (https://www.angl.hu-berlin.de/department/staff/1685901/unterrichtsmaterialien/fundamental-engl-syntax-2014-online-einseitig.pdf), David Adger's Core Syntax (which also talks about German), and Andrew Carnie's Syntax: A Generative Introduction (2nd Edition). There's also a good set of slides on the topic at http://www1.pu.edu.tw/~jason/UMS_i(DPs,%20CPs,%20NegPs%20&%20TPs).pdf .
For the German section, we used this handout by Sten Vikner: http://www.hum.au.dk/engelsk/engsv/handouts/vikner-ho-2016-V2-cP-CP-Cambridge.pdf
And there are more examples taken from the following:
http://switchll.net/papers/2013AFLAhandout.pdf
http://gagl.eldoc.ub.rug.nl/FILES/root/1999-43/03/GAGL-43-1999-03.pdf
degruyter.com/view/product/19650
Looking forward to next time!