Contributors
Preface
PART I: Background
1. Nanosyntax: The Basics,
Lena Baunaz & Eric Lander
2. Notes on Insertion in Distributed Morphology and Nanosyntax,
Pavel Caha
3. Spanning vs. Constituent Lexicalization: The Case of Portmanteau
Prefixes,
Tarald Taraldsen
PART II: Empirical Investigations
4. A Note on Kim's Korean Question Particles Seen as Pronouns,
Michal Starke
5. Syncretism and Containment in Spatial Deixis,
Eric Lander & Liliane Haegeman
6. Decomposing Complementizers : The fseq of French, Modern Greek,
Serbo-Croatian and Bulgarian Complementizers,
Lena Baunaz
7. Syncretisms and the Morphosyntax of Negation,
Karen De Clercq
8. The Nanosyntax of Russian Verbal Prefixes,
Inna Tolskaya
PART III: Theoretical Explorations
9. Complex Left Branches, Spellout, and Prefixes,
Michal Starke
10. Word Order and Nanosyntax: Preverbal Subjects and
Interrogatives across Spanish Varieties,
Antonio Fábregas
11. The Feature Structure of Pronouns: A Probe into
Multidimensional Paradigms,
Guido Vanden Wyngaerd
12. Fseq Zones and Slavic L>T>N Participles,
Lucie Taraldsen Medová & Bartosz Wiland
Glossary
Index
Lena Baunaz is a postdoctoral assistant at the University of
Zurich. She holds a PhD from the University of Geneva, which she
published as The Grammar of French Quantification (Springer, 2011).
Her recent research interests include the nano-syntax of the
subjunctive mood, complementizers, and ontological categories. She
has published in Probus, Studia Linguistica and others.
Liliane Haegeman was professor of English Linguistics at the
University of Geneva (Switzerland) from 1984-1999. Between 2000 and
2009 she was full professor of English linguistics at the
University of Lille III. Since 2009 she has held a research
position at Ghent University. She has worked extensively on the
syntax of English and Flemish.
Karen De Clercq is a postdoctoral researcher funded by the FWO and
working at Ghent University. She wrote her PhD on the nanosyntax of
negative markers under the supervision of Prof. Liliane Haegeman.
She is currently working on the fine-grained morpho-syntax of
Quantity-words (many/much; few/little), adjectives, degree
comparison, and negation.
Eric Lander is a postdoctoral researcher at the University of
Gothenburg, currently working on negation in the history of
Scandinavian. His research interests include Germanic philology,
the NP/DP parameter, demonstratives, complementizers, and
ontological categories. He has earned degrees from Harvard, Leuven,
and Ghent.
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