0000000000846709

AUTHOR

Rafał Jurczyk

0000-0002-0546-9321

showing 2 related works from this author

Noun/pronoun asymmetry in Polish: Against the nominal perspective and the DP-hypothesis

2020

AbstractThis paper argues that the Polish noun-pronoun asymmetry in which the intensifier sam ‘self’ precedes nouns and follows pronominals is not a simple case of configuration in the DP, whereby pronouns, unlike nominals, target D0 for referential reasons (cf. Rutkowski 2002, 2012). Such viewpoints, in the case of Polish, are unfortunate because they appear to underlyingly work on and draw from the syntax of nominal projections characteristic of English or Italian i.e., languages with articles. We show that the asymmetry pertains to various semantic interpretations of sam, the different semantic specification of nominals and pronominals, and the flexible word order property. What we need,…

050101 languages & linguisticsPronounComputer sciencemedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesSemantic propertyIntensifierSyntaxAgreementLinguisticsFocus (linguistics)030507 speech-language pathology & audiology03 medical and health sciencesNoun0501 psychology and cognitive sciences0305 other medical sciencemedia_commonWord orderPoznan Studies in Contemporary Linguistics
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The Loss of Grammatical Gender and Case Features Between Old and Early Middle English: Its Impact on Simple Demonstratives and Topic Shift

2017

AbstractIn this paper we examine the relation between the loss of formal gender and Case features on simple demonstratives and the topic shifting property they manifest. The examination period spans between Old English and Early Middle English. While we argue that this loss has important discourse-pragmatic and derivational effects on demonstratives, we also employ the Strong Minimalist Hypothesis approach (Chomsky 2001) and feature valuation, as defined in Pesetsky & Torrego (2007), to display how their syntactic computation and pragmatic properties have come about. To account for the above innovations yielding the Early Middle Englishϸe(‘the’), we first discuss the formal properties o…

060201 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguageGrammatical genderthe loss of formal gender and caseLiterature and Literary TheoryTopic shiftPE1-372906 humanities and the artsoe/eme demonstrativestopic shiftLanguage and LinguisticsLinguisticslanguage.human_languageEnglish languageMiddle English0602 languages and literaturelanguagethe loss of formal gender and CaseLiterary criticismOE/EME demonstrativesinflectional morphologyPsychologySimple (philosophy)Studia Anglica Posnaniensia
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