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Lẽ thường trong lập luận và văn hóa ứng xử của cộng đồng / Đỗ Việt Hùng.
// Ngôn ngữ. 2014, Số 10 (305). 2014tr. 11-19. Study the relationship between language and culture are trying to attract the attention of many scientists, including those linguists. The characteristics of a cultural community expressed thruogh many spheres of language through the system like vocabulary, identification methods, the idoms, proverns... However, there is at least the studies mentioned in the relationship between arguments and the habits of behavior are formed in social life. This article is one of the few articles mentioned this problem to point out a few features the cultural behavior of a Vietnamese parta are formed and can become popular.
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No argument–adjunct asymmetry in reconstruction for Binding Condition C / Benjamin Bruening.
// Journal of Linguistics Vol. 55, Issue 2/2019 2019.p. 247-276 The syntax literature has overwhelmingly adopted the view that Condition C reconstruction takes place in wh-chains for R-expressions contained within arguments, but not within adjuncts of fronted wh-phrases. At the same time, this empirical picture has been questioned by various authors. We undertake a series of grammaticality surveys using Amazon Mechanical Turk in an attempt to clarify the empirical picture regarding reconstruction for Binding Condition C. We find absolutely no evidence of an argument–adjunct distinction in reconstruction for Binding Condition C. Neither arguments nor adjuncts reconstruct for Condition C. We suggest that those speakers who report such a contrast (linguists, primarily) are following a pragmatic bias, and not Condition C. While we do not find reconstruction of dependents of fronted NPs for Binding Condition C, we do find reconstruction of fronted PPs. That is, the NP complement of a fronted P must reconstruct for Binding Condition C. The literature also finds reconstruction of NP complements of verbs and adjectives. This means that fronted Ns are special in not requiring reconstruction of their arguments and adjuncts. We suggest that, syntactically, arguments of Ns are treated as adjuncts: semantic arguments simply adjoin in the same manner as true adjuncts. Syntactic adjuncts can be left out of lower copies in chains, something that we suggest follows from a left-to-right syntactic derivation plus an economy condition on copying.
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No argument–adjunct asymmetry in reconstruction for Binding Condition C / Eman Al Khalaf
// Journal of Linguistics Vol. 55- Issue 2/2019 2019.p. 247-276. The syntax literature has overwhelmingly adopted the view that Condition C reconstruction takes place in wh-chains for R-expressions contained within arguments, but
not within adjuncts of fronted wh-phrases. At the same time, this empirical picture has
been questioned by various authors. We undertake a series of grammaticality surveys
using Amazon Mechanical Turk in an attempt to clarify the empirical picture regarding
reconstruction for Binding Condition C. We find absolutely no evidence of an argument–
adjunct distinction in reconstruction for Binding Condition C. Neither arguments nor
adjuncts reconstruct for Condition C. We suggest that those speakers who report such
a contrast (linguists, primarily) are following a pragmatic bias, and not Condition C.
While we do not find reconstruction of dependents of fronted NPs for Binding Condition
C, we do find reconstruction of fronted PPs. That is, the NP complement of a fronted
P must reconstruct for Binding Condition C. The literature also finds reconstruction of
NP complements of verbs and adjectives. This means that fronted Ns are special in not
requiring reconstruction of their arguments and adjuncts. We suggest that, syntactically,
arguments of Ns are treated as adjuncts: semantic arguments simply adjoin in the same
manner as true adjuncts. Syntactic adjuncts can be left out of lower copies in chains,
something that we suggest follows from a left-to-right syntactic derivation plus an economy
condition on copying.
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