LINGUIST List 19.2721
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Mon Sep 08 2008
Diss: Syntax: Hoffmann: 'Preposition Pied Piping and Stranding in ...'
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1. Thomas
Hoffmann,
Preposition Pied Piping and Stranding in British and Kenyan English: An experimental- and corpus-based construction grammar analysis
Message 1: Preposition Pied Piping and Stranding in British and Kenyan English: An experimental- and corpus-based construction grammar analysis
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Date: 08-Sep-2008
From: Thomas Hoffmann <thomas.hoffmann sprachlit.uni-regensburg.de>
Subject: Preposition Pied Piping and Stranding in British and Kenyan English: An experimental- and corpus-based construction grammar analysis
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Institution: Universität Regensburg
Program: English Linguistics
Dissertation Status: Completed
Degree Date: 2007
Author: Thomas Hoffmann
Dissertation Title: Preposition Pied Piping and Stranding in British and Kenyan English: An experimental- and corpus-based construction grammar analysis
Linguistic Field(s):
Syntax
Subject Language(s): English (eng)
Dissertation Director:
Herbert Brekle
Roswitha Fischer
Edgar W. Schneider
Dissertation Abstract:
Preposition placement in English has attracted a great deal of attention in the linguistic literature since many syntactic contexts license two competing structural variants (cf. Pullum and Huddleston 2002. 'Prepositions and prepositional phrases'. In: Geoffrey K. Pullum and Rodney Huddleston, eds. The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 627.): in preposed, interrogative, exclamative and wh-relative clauses the preposition can either be 'stranded', i.e. appear without an adjacent NP complement (3.1) or occur 'pied piped', i.e. in clause-initial position (3.2): (3.1) a. [Stranding] I've heard of. b. [What] is he talking about? c. [What a great topic] he talked about! d. the structure [[which] he talked about]. (3.2) a. [Of stranding] I've heard. b. [About what] is he talking? c. [About what a great topic] he talked! d. the structure [[about which] he talked]. Non-wh-relative clauses (3.3a), comparative (3.3b), hollow (3.3c) and passive clauses (3.3d), however, only permit stranding: (3.3) a. the structure [(that) he talked about]. b. the same stuff as [I talked about]. c. His thesis was easy [to find fault with]. d. Stranding has been talked about enough. The present thesis attempts to investigate the distribution of preposition pied piping and stranding in all clause types. In order to distinguish language-specific form general linguistic constraints it does so by drawing on empirical corpus and experimental data for L1 British English BE as well as L2 Kenyan English KenE. Finally, it attempts to provide a full account of preposition placement in both varieties within the framework of construction grammar.
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