16.1248, Qs: Poll About Proverbs; Higgenbotham's Linking Theory

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Tue Apr 19 23:06:50 UTC 2005


LINGUIST List: Vol-16-1248. Tue Apr 19 2005. ISSN: 1068 - 4875.

Subject: 16.1248, Qs: Poll About Proverbs; Higgenbotham's Linking Theory

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1)
Date: 19-Apr-2005
From: Britta Juska-Bacher < Britta.Juska-Bacher at access.unizh.ch >
Subject: Poll About Proverbs

2)
Date: 18-Apr-2005
From: Tony Marmo < antonio_marmo at EXCITE.COM >
Subject: On Higgenbotham's Linking Theory

	
-------------------------Message 1 ----------------------------------
Date: Tue, 19 Apr 2005 19:03:07
From: Britta Juska-Bacher < Britta.Juska-Bacher at access.unizh.ch >
Subject: Poll About Proverbs


I work at the University of Zurich (Switzerland) on a research project
about proverbs and idioms. With the help of a questionnaire I investigate
in different languages (Dutch, German, Swedish and English) which 16th
century proverbs are still known and which are still in use. The
questionnaire is based on the famous painting by Pieter Bruegel the elder,
the Netherlandish proverbs (1559).

In Dutch, German and Swedish speaking countries numerous people showed
their interest in this research project by participating in the poll
(during the first four weeks I received more than 700 filled-in
questionnaires). I am now looking for native English speakers who want to
participate in the poll.

You can find the questionnaire at
http://www.ds.unizh.ch/Nordistik/Mitarbeitende/Juska-Bacher/forschung.php.

I would also be very grateful if you could forward the link to other people
who you think might be interested.

Thanks a lot for your help!

Britta Juska-Bacher

Linguistic Field(s): General Linguistics

Subject Language(s): Dutch (DUT)
                     English (ENG)
                     German, Standard (GER)
                     Swedish (SWD)



	
-------------------------Message 2 ----------------------------------
Date: Tue, 19 Apr 2005 19:03:11
From: Tony Marmo < antonio_marmo at EXCITE.COM >
Subject: On Higgenbotham's Linking Theory

	

The occurence and the behaviour of co-referential nominals in sentences,
under the labels of binding and control, have been classically treated as
mainly syntactic phenomena, where the syntactic structure was licensed by
teleological co-indexation considerations.

Binding and Control theories are the oldest and most resilient component
of Generative thought that has survived to present day. The basic
assumptions and core concepts of Classical Binding and Control theory  have
their origins in Langacker (1966), Rosenbaun (1967), Postal (1970),
Jackendoff (1972) (Chapters 4 and 5), Chomsky (1973) and Lasnik (1976),
who had tackled most of the main issues from a transformational
perspective.  Thereafter, this conceptual Binding theoretic nucleus has
been  re-formulated based on the theoretic refinement and enlargement of
the  application of Langacker's (1966) notion of command in Reinhart (1976)
 and Chomsky (1980, 1981 and 1982), together and in parallel with  Bresnam
(1982) and Manzini (1983). The format of Binding theory has  remained
almost unaltered since that time. Later proposals of  reformulation, such
as Reinhart and Reuland (1993), Reinhart (1999,  2000), Heim (2004) etc,
have kept the essence of the model virtually intact.

One alternative that I consider at least captivating is Higginbotham's
(1983)  Linking theory.  But, as far as I know, it has not been used by many.

If anyone reading this post works with James Higginbotham's linking
theory, please let me know about it. Thanks!

Linguistic Field(s): Linguistic Theories
                     Syntax






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