Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tensed-S_condition> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 38 of
38
with 100 triples per page.
- Tensed-S_condition abstract "The Tensed-S condition (where S stands for \"Sentence\") is a condition proposed in Chomsky (1973) which essentially stipulates that certain classes of syntactic transformational rules cannot apply across clause boundaries. The condition is formalised as follows:Tensed-S condition (TSC)\"No rule can involve X, Y in the structure... X ... [α... Y ...] ...where α is a tensed sentence.\"(Chomsky 1973: 238)The rule accounts for such phenomena as the lack of passivization (a process which turns an active sentence into a passive one) in sentence (2) below:(1) The footballers are believed [to be talented](2) *The footballers are believed [are talented]Based on the assumption that \"The footballers\" originates inside the square brackets in both sentences (as the thematic subject of the predicate \"be talented\"), the TSC prohibits its raising (via A-movement) out of the finite clause in (2), but not the non-finite clause in (1).The TSC (along with the SSC) also has implications for binding theory in conjunction with a simple rule of disjoint reference (which stipulated that any pronoun following an NP antecedent in the same sentence, has disjoint reference with it; the rule applies anywhere unless it is blocked). The disjoint reference rule can apply in examples like (3) and (4) (which is an ECM structure) below, but is blocked from applying by the TSC in sentences (5) and (6) – where there are clause boundaries – thereby allowing the pronoun to refer back to the antecedent.(3) *Johni likes himi(4) *Johni believes himi to like Mary(5) Johni said that Mary likes himi(6) Johni said that hei likes MaryThe way the TSC accounted for binding as well as movement phenomena (such as the passivization examples above), was influential for much subsequent research which tried to reduce binding and movement to the same set of principles (see Kayne (2002) for a recent implementation). The subsequent binding conditions A and B of Chomsky (1981) essentially replaced the TSC (as well as the SSC), and it is no longer a part of the toolkit of current researchers.".
- Tensed-S_condition wikiPageID "11651613".
- Tensed-S_condition wikiPageLength "3307".
- Tensed-S_condition wikiPageOutDegree "19".
- Tensed-S_condition wikiPageRevisionID "695748242".
- Tensed-S_condition wikiPageWikiLink A-movement.
- Tensed-S_condition wikiPageWikiLink Antecedent_(grammar).
- Tensed-S_condition wikiPageWikiLink Binding_(linguistics).
- Tensed-S_condition wikiPageWikiLink Category:Generative_linguistics.
- Tensed-S_condition wikiPageWikiLink Category:Syntactic_relationships.
- Tensed-S_condition wikiPageWikiLink Exceptional_case-marking.
- Tensed-S_condition wikiPageWikiLink Minimalist_program.
- Tensed-S_condition wikiPageWikiLink Morris_Halle.
- Tensed-S_condition wikiPageWikiLink Noam_Chomsky.
- Tensed-S_condition wikiPageWikiLink Noun_phrase.
- Tensed-S_condition wikiPageWikiLink Passive_voice.
- Tensed-S_condition wikiPageWikiLink Paul_Kiparsky.
- Tensed-S_condition wikiPageWikiLink Richard_Kayne.
- Tensed-S_condition wikiPageWikiLink Specified_subject_condition.
- Tensed-S_condition wikiPageWikiLink Stephen_R._Anderson.
- Tensed-S_condition wikiPageWikiLink Thematic_relation.
- Tensed-S_condition wikiPageWikiLink Transformational_grammar.
- Tensed-S_condition wikiPageWikiLink Voice_(grammar).
- Tensed-S_condition wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:disjoint.
- Tensed-S_condition wikiPageWikiLinkText "Tensed-S condition".
- Tensed-S_condition wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Tensed-S_condition subject Category:Generative_linguistics.
- Tensed-S_condition subject Category:Syntactic_relationships.
- Tensed-S_condition hypernym Condition.
- Tensed-S_condition type Disease.
- Tensed-S_condition type Redirect.
- Tensed-S_condition comment "The Tensed-S condition (where S stands for \"Sentence\") is a condition proposed in Chomsky (1973) which essentially stipulates that certain classes of syntactic transformational rules cannot apply across clause boundaries. The condition is formalised as follows:Tensed-S condition (TSC)\"No rule can involve X, Y in the structure... X ... [α...".
- Tensed-S_condition label "Tensed-S condition".
- Tensed-S_condition sameAs Q7700630.
- Tensed-S_condition sameAs m.02rmsfb.
- Tensed-S_condition sameAs Q7700630.
- Tensed-S_condition wasDerivedFrom Tensed-S_condition?oldid=695748242.
- Tensed-S_condition isPrimaryTopicOf Tensed-S_condition.