ABSTRACT

This volume is about 'dislocation' – the removal of phrases from their canonical positions in a sentence to its left or right edge. Dislocation encompasses a wide range of linguistic phenomena, related to nominal and adverbial expressions and to the information structuring notions of topic and focus; and takes intriguingly different forms across languages. This book reveals some of the empirical richness of dislocation and some key puzzles related to its syntactic, semantic, and discourse analysis.

chapter |27 pages

Introduction

Dislocation: Concepts, Questions, Goals

part I|142 pages

Structure of Dislocation

chapter 1|18 pages

On Left Dislocation in the Recent History of English

Theory and Data Hand in Hand 1

chapter 2|46 pages

The Left Clausal Periphery

Clitic Left Dislocation in Italian and Left Dislocation in German 1

chapter 3|19 pages

Echo Questions and Split CP 1

part III|132 pages

Beyond the Sentence

chapter 12|17 pages

Parenthetical Adverbials

The Radical Orphanage Approach 1

chapter 13|18 pages

Postscript

Problems and Solutions for Orphan Analyses

chapter 16|30 pages

Defined by Their Left

Wh-Relative Clauses in German 1