Publications
Publication details [#43940]
Barton, Ellen L., Ljiljana Progovac, Kate Paesani and Eugenia Casielles, eds. 2006. The Syntax of Nonsententials: Multidisciplinary perspectives. (Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today 93). John Benjamins. x+372 pp
Publication type
Book – edited volume
Publication language
English
Keywords
Annotation
This volume brings the data that many in formal linguistics have dismissed as peripheral straight into the core of syntactic theory. By bringing together experts from syntax, semantics, pragmatics, philosophy of language, language acquisition, aphasia, and pidgin and creole studies, the volume makes a multidisciplinary case for the existence of nonsententials, which are analyzed in various chapters as root phrases and small clauses (Me; Me First!; Him worry?!; Class in session), and whose distinguishing property is the absence of Tense, and, with it, any syntactic phenomena that rely on Tense, including structural Nominative Case. Arguably, the lack of Tense specification is also responsible for the dearth of indicative interpretations among nonsententials, as well as for their heavy reliance on pragmatic context. So pervasive is nonsentential speech across all groups, including normal adult speech, that a case can be made that continuity of grammar lies in nonsentential, rather than sentential speech.