Update: February 24, 2023 The new version of Termout.org is now online, so this web site is now obsolete and will soon be dismantled. |
clitics |
: Bonet, E. (1995). Feature structure of Romance clitics. Natural Language and Linguistic Theory, 13, 607-647. : Bortolini, U., Arfé, B., Caselli, M., Degasperi, L., Deevy, P. & Leonard, L. (2006). Clinical markers for specific language impairment in Italian: The contribution of clitics and non-word repetition. International Journal of Language Communication Disorders, 41(6), 695-712. : Castel, V. (2008). A Systemic Functional micro-grammar of Spanish clitics. En C. Wu, C. Matthiessen & M. Herke (Eds.), Proceedings of ISFC 2008: Voices around the world (pp. 7-12). ISFC: Sydney. : Enrique-Arias, A. (2005). When clitics become affixes, where do they come to rest? A case from Spanish. In W. U. Dressler, D. Kastovsky, O. E. Pfeiffer & F. Rainer (Eds.), Morpholog y and its Demarcations (pp. 67-79). Amsterdam: John Benjamins. : Harris, J. (1996). The morphology of Spanish clitics. In H. Campos & P. Kempchinsky (Eds.), Evolution and revolution in linguistic theory: Essays in honor of Carlos Otero (pp. 168-197). Washington D.C.: Georgetown University Press. : Not every morphological representation of the clitic and verb-ending systems can realize any of the semantic features above. Tables 1-5, adapted from Castel (2012), list all the semantic features that clitics and verb endings necessarily or optionally express. : Thus, las may be said to expound the feature ‘high deixis’. Finally, as proposed by García (1975), verb endings tend to bear a greater thematic focus than clitics. In this case, -o is ‘thematic’, while te and -o are ‘non-thematic’[27]^4. |