Reprint

Recent Advances in Research on Island Phenomena

Edited by
January 2023
300 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-6316-9 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-6317-6 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Recent Advances in Research on Island Phenomena that was published in

Social Sciences, Arts & Humanities
Summary

In natural languages, filler-gap dependencies can straddle across an unbounded distance. Since the 1960s, the term “island” has been used to describe syntactic structures from which extraction is impossible or impeded. While examples from English are ubiquitous, attested counterexamples in the Mainland Scandinavian languages have continuously been dismissed as illusory and alternative accounts for the underlying structure of such cases have been proposed. However, since such extractions are pervasive in spoken Mainland Scandinavian, these languages may not have been given the attention that they deserve in the syntax literature. In addition, recent research suggests that extraction from certain types of island structures in English might not be as unacceptable as previously assumed either. These findings break new empirical ground, question perceived knowledge, and may indeed have substantial ramifications for syntactic theory. This volume provides an overview of state-of-the-art research on island phenomena primarily in English and the Scandinavian languages, focusing on how languages compare to English, with the aim to shed new light on the nature of island constraints from different theoretical perspectives.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
syntactic satiation; linguistic judgments; island effects; experimental syntax; syntactic theory; island constraints; processing complexity; unacceptability and grammaticality; A′ constructions; frequency; surprisal; islands; relative clauses; island effects; experimental syntax; wh-movement; canonical and noncanonical existentials; movement from DP; acceptability judgments; adjunct clauses; corpus study; Danish; English; islands; relative clauses; preposing; topicalization; Faroese; Icelandic; Swedish; contrastive topic; continued topic; VP ellipsis; A-bar movement; extraction; Icelandic; island phenomena; relative clauses; Scandinavian; Swedish; syntactic dependencies; adjunct islands; wh-extraction; locality; present participle; gradient acceptability; acceptability model; island constraints; experimental syntax; wh-questions; relative clauses; Norwegian; syntax; islands; acceptability; grammaticality; satiation; variation; Islands; satiation; frequency; adaptation; n/a