The Wiley Blackwell Companion to Syntax, Second Edition 2017
DOI: 10.1002/9781118358733.wbsyncom002
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Reconstruction, Binding, and Scope

Abstract: There are mismatches found in movement constructions between surface syntactic structures and associated semantic interpretations, suggesting a failure of incremental compositionality: some moved phrases appear to behave interpretively as if they had not moved. The extent of this phenomenon, called reconstruction , is presented, and its treatments discussed in connection with the interpretive properties of binding and scope. We document that reconstruction effects are found in all types… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(19 citation statements)
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References 30 publications
(26 reference statements)
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“…This formalism derives binary-branching “X-bar” structural descriptions that integrate constituency, dependency and movement information. The particular syntactic analyses that we used extend those in Hale (2003, chapter 4) along the lines of Sportiche et al (2013). Figure 1 (bottom) illustrates one such tree in which the representation of a long-distance “movement” relationship leads to node counts that are different from those derived by a context-free analysis of the same sentence (Figure 1, top).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This formalism derives binary-branching “X-bar” structural descriptions that integrate constituency, dependency and movement information. The particular syntactic analyses that we used extend those in Hale (2003, chapter 4) along the lines of Sportiche et al (2013). Figure 1 (bottom) illustrates one such tree in which the representation of a long-distance “movement” relationship leads to node counts that are different from those derived by a context-free analysis of the same sentence (Figure 1, top).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is salso a strong crossover effect -see Postal (1971 Coreference is possible in (37), but not in (38). As pointed out by Sportiche (2007), the problem is not due to linear precedence, because both (39) and (40) are grammatical, showing that precedence by itself is not enough for accounting for the contrast between (37) and (38). In sentence (37) the problem is instead constituted by the structural relation between the pronoun and its intended antecedent.…”
Section: Current Theoriesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Consider for instance the following Italian example (where e in example (42) stands for empty, signaling the basic position of the 18 The literature on this issue is very rich and it is impossible to summarize the relevant discussion in this work. See among the many others, Sportiche (2007) 19 For a discussion of condition C and CLLD in Italian see Cecchetto and Chierchia (1999), Frascarelli and Hinterhölzl (2007).…”
Section: Current Theoriesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The empirical status of Principle C violations in reconstruction contexts is both subtle and intricate (see Heycock 1995, Büring 2005, Sportiche 2006, Salzmann 2006, and others for comprehensive discussions). Certainly there are well-established classes of examples where reconstructed Principle C violations do not result in ungrammaticality.…”
Section: Principle Cmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…the lip service that (Mary said that) John paid to civil liberties In order for the idiomatic interpretations to be licensed, there must be some mechanism for transmitting information about the idiom chunk from its displaced position to the rest of the idiomatic expression. This has traditionally served as an argument for syntactic reconstruction (see, e.g., Sportiche 2006), since one way to make the needed connection is to syntactically reconstruct the idiom chunk, at which point it will be reunited with the rest of its idiom.…”
Section: Idiomsmentioning
confidence: 99%