20.531, Diss: Morphology/Syntax: Gonz ález López: 'Spanish Clitic Climbing'

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LINGUIST List: Vol-20-531. Thu Feb 19 2009. ISSN: 1068 - 4875.

Subject: 20.531, Diss: Morphology/Syntax: González López: 'Spanish Clitic Climbing'

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1)
Date: 19-Feb-2009
From: Verónica González López < gonzalezv at denison.edu >
Subject: Spanish Clitic Climbing
 

	
-------------------------Message 1 ---------------------------------- 
Date: Thu, 19 Feb 2009 12:47:44
From: Verónica González López [gonzalezv at denison.edu]
Subject: Spanish Clitic Climbing

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Institution: Pennsylvania State University 
Program: Department of Spanish, Italian and Portuguese 
Dissertation Status: Completed 
Degree Date: 2008 

Author: Verónica González López

Dissertation Title: Spanish Clitic Climbing 

Linguistic Field(s): Morphology
                     Syntax

Subject Language(s): Asturian (ast)
                     Italian (ita)
                     Portuguese (por)
                     Spanish (spa)


Dissertation Director(s):
Almeida Jacqueline Toribio
Barbara Bullock
Marie Gillette
Karlos Arregi
John Lipski

Dissertation Abstract:

This dissertation focuses on the study of direct object clitics and clitic
climbing structures in Spanish. Clitic pronouns in the Romance languages
have long occupied the interests of generative linguists. In the field of
morpho-syntax there exists a rich body of literature on the nature and
distribution of object clitic pronouns in Romance, addressing a diversity
of questions, among these, whether clitic pronouns behave as independent
words or bound morphemes, and how and where they are to be represented in
the grammatical structure of a sentence. The answers to such questions have
had implications for the advancement of theories and models in other fields
of study, such as language contact and language acquisition. To date,
French and Italian have been the primary focus of attention in research
addressing clitic pronouns; the facts of Spanish have gone largely
unexamined. Redressing this oversight, the present project examines data on
the placement of pronouns across dialects of Spanish. The findings will
afford a more complete account of clitic pronouns in Romance than is
available in the extant literature and contribute to theories of syntactic
micro-variation.

Unlike other Romance languages, Spanish allows clitic pronouns to appear
attached to the non-finite verb, as in (1a) and (2a), or attached to the
main conjugated verb, as in (1b) and (2b), a phenomenon known as 'clitic
climbing': 
		
(1) a. Estoy  comiéndolo. 
      am.1sg eating.Cl 
      b. Lo estoy  comiendo.
      Cl am.1sg eating
      'I am eating it'

(2) a. Quiero comerlo.
      want   to.eat.Cl
      b. Lo quiero comer.
      Cl want   to.eat
      'I want to eat it'

The facts of clitic placement across dialects of Spanish (Castilian Spanish
and North Western Spanish) and in other Romance languages (Italian,
Portuguese, and Asturian) are carefully examined, with the aim of
presenting an account of clitic climbing that is empirically and
explanatorily sound. At the center of the present study is the development
of a proposal in which clitic pronouns may be generated in two structural
positions in the clause, as dictated by the selectional properties of
particular predicates.

The intellectual merit of this proposal resides principally in
understanding the mechanisms that govern the placement of clitic pronouns
in clitic climbing structures. It is novel in focusing specifically on the
analysis of clitic pronouns in Spanish and in seeking to achieve an
adequate and complete description of these elements both morphologically
and syntactically. A broader contribution of the work is its focus on
reaching a better understanding not only of Spanish clitic pronouns, but
also of Spanish syntactic structure in general, as the study of clitic
placement largely overlaps with other areas of syntactic research, such as
verb movement. 






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