Topic, Antitopic and Verb Agreement in Non-Standard French.

By: Lambrecht, KnudMaterial type: TextTextSeries: Pragmatics & BeyondPublisher: Amsterdam : John Benjamins Publishing Company, 1981Copyright date: ©1981Description: 1 online resource (121 pages)Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9789027280794Subject(s): French language -- Sentences | French language -- Topic and comment | French language -- VariationGenre/Form: Electronic books.Additional physical formats: Print version:: Topic, Antitopic and Verb Agreement in Non-Standard FrenchDDC classification: 447 LOC classification: PC2395 -- .L28 1981ebOnline resources: Click to View
Contents:
TOPIC, ANTITOPIC AND VERB AGREEMENT IN NON-STANDARD FRENCH -- Editorial page -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Acknowledgements -- Table of contents -- 0. INTRODUCTION -- 1. THE STANDARD/NON-STANDARD DISTINCTION IN MODERN FRENCH: THEORETICAL IMPLICATIONS -- 2. CLITIC PRONOUNS AS AGREEMENT MARKERS -- 2.1. Properties of clitic pronouns in Standard and in Non-Standard French -- 2.2. Summary -- 2.3. Clitic pronouns and the verb -- 3. VERB AGREEMENT IN NON-STANDARD FRENCH -- 3.0. Introduction -- 3.1. Topic Agreement -- 3.2. Antitopic agreement -- FOOTNOTES -- REFERENCES.
Summary: The author describes and explains the syntactic and pragmatic properties of the nominal and pronominal elements in sentences of the types Ces Romains ils sont fous and Ils sont fous, ces Romains, which, in spite of their frequent occurrence, have so far received little attention among linguists and grammarians. He argues that far from having the marginal status of a linguistic anomaly, the cooccurrence in the same clause of coreferential nouns and pronouns is one formal manifestation of an important functional principle in modern French: the encoding of a topic-comment relationship in the surface structure of the sentence. The pronouns in sentences such as the ones mentioned are interpreted as agreement markers. The syntactic and semantic differences between topics and anti-topics are analyzed.
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TOPIC, ANTITOPIC AND VERB AGREEMENT IN NON-STANDARD FRENCH -- Editorial page -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Acknowledgements -- Table of contents -- 0. INTRODUCTION -- 1. THE STANDARD/NON-STANDARD DISTINCTION IN MODERN FRENCH: THEORETICAL IMPLICATIONS -- 2. CLITIC PRONOUNS AS AGREEMENT MARKERS -- 2.1. Properties of clitic pronouns in Standard and in Non-Standard French -- 2.2. Summary -- 2.3. Clitic pronouns and the verb -- 3. VERB AGREEMENT IN NON-STANDARD FRENCH -- 3.0. Introduction -- 3.1. Topic Agreement -- 3.2. Antitopic agreement -- FOOTNOTES -- REFERENCES.

The author describes and explains the syntactic and pragmatic properties of the nominal and pronominal elements in sentences of the types Ces Romains ils sont fous and Ils sont fous, ces Romains, which, in spite of their frequent occurrence, have so far received little attention among linguists and grammarians. He argues that far from having the marginal status of a linguistic anomaly, the cooccurrence in the same clause of coreferential nouns and pronouns is one formal manifestation of an important functional principle in modern French: the encoding of a topic-comment relationship in the surface structure of the sentence. The pronouns in sentences such as the ones mentioned are interpreted as agreement markers. The syntactic and semantic differences between topics and anti-topics are analyzed.

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Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2018. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

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