Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Subjacency> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 54 of
54
with 100 triples per page.
- Subjacency abstract "Subjacency is a general syntactic locality constraint on movement. It specifies restrictions placed on movement and regards it as a strictly local process. This term was first defined by Noam Chomsky in 1973 and constitutes the main concept of the Government and Binding Theory. The revised definition of subjacency from Chomsky (1977) is as follows: "A cyclic rule cannot move a phrase from position Y to position X (or conversely) in … X … [α… [β… Y … ] … ] … X …, where α and β are cyclic nodes. Cyclic nodes are S and NP", (where S=Sentence and NP=Noun Phrase).This principle states that no movement can move an element over more than one bounding node at a time. In more recent frameworks, bounding nodes which are hurdles to movement are AgrP (Agreement Phrase) and DP (Determiner Phrase) (S and NP in Chomsky’s definition respectively). Therefore, Subjacency condition limits movement by defining bounding nodes. It also accounts for the fact that all movements are local.".
- Subjacency thumbnail Rys1.jpg?width=300.
- Subjacency wikiPageID "39145718".
- Subjacency wikiPageLength "3769".
- Subjacency wikiPageOutDegree "28".
- Subjacency wikiPageRevisionID "588929174".
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Agreement_Phrase.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Bounding_node.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Bounding_nodes.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Category:Syntactic_transformation.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Category:Syntax.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Conditions_on_Transformations.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Cyclic_movement.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Dependent_clause.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Determiner_Phrase.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Embedded_clause.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Extraction_island.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Generative_grammar.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Government_and_Binding_Theory.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Government_and_binding_theory.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Interrogative_word.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink John_R._Ross.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Lectures_on_Government_and_Binding.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Lectures_on_Government_and_Binding:_The_Pisa_Lectures.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Locality_(linguistics).
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Noam_Chomsky.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Noun_Phrase.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Noun_phrase.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Sentence_(linguistics).
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Specifier.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Syntactic_movement.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Wh-movement.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink Wh-word.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink File:Rys1.jpg.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink File:Rys22.jpg.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLink File:Rys33.jpg.
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLinkText "Subjacency principle".
- Subjacency wikiPageWikiLinkText "Subjacency".
- Subjacency hasPhotoCollection Subjacency.
- Subjacency wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:More_footnotes.
- Subjacency wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Subjacency subject Category:Syntactic_transformation.
- Subjacency subject Category:Syntax.
- Subjacency hypernym Constraint.
- Subjacency type Article.
- Subjacency type Article.
- Subjacency comment "Subjacency is a general syntactic locality constraint on movement. It specifies restrictions placed on movement and regards it as a strictly local process. This term was first defined by Noam Chomsky in 1973 and constitutes the main concept of the Government and Binding Theory. The revised definition of subjacency from Chomsky (1977) is as follows: "A cyclic rule cannot move a phrase from position Y to position X (or conversely) in … X … [α… [β… Y … ] … ] … X …, where α and β are cyclic nodes.".
- Subjacency label "Subjacency".
- Subjacency sameAs m.0t_f60w.
- Subjacency sameAs Q17143356.
- Subjacency sameAs Q17143356.
- Subjacency wasDerivedFrom Subjacency?oldid=588929174.
- Subjacency depiction Rys1.jpg.
- Subjacency isPrimaryTopicOf Subjacency.