The Special Collection gathers leading experts on substance-free phonology to address the fundamental questions of this rapidly developing research programme: What does phonological knowledge consist of? How is it acquired, implemented in the brain, and related to phonetic substance? What implications does substance-free phonology have for historical and comparative linguistics?
Guest editors: Veno Volenec & Bridget Samuels
Editors: Bridget Samuels (Guest Editor), Veno Volenec (Guest Editor)
Special Collection: Substance-Free Phonology: principles, research directions, and current issues
Get rich quick: Why kids don't need Occam's Razor
Kyle Gorman and Charles Reiss
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Collection: Substance-Free Phonology: principles, research directions, and current issues
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Substance-Free Phonology: principles, research directions, and current issues
Data-driven analyses of ellipsis (mis)matches
Neoconstructionist perspectives on form and meaning composition
On the nature of agents
Change of state expressions
The syntax of argument structure alternations across frameworks
Thematic formatives and linguistic theory
Multivaluation in agreement
GLOWing Papers 2021
Speaker, Addressee, and Social Relation
Non-Conservativity with Precise Proportions
GLOWing Papers 2020
The grammar of Agree(ment) and Reference
Meaning-driven selectional restrictions in the domain of clause embedding
The acquisition of the syntactic tree. Insights from cartography
GLOWing Papers 2019
Definiteness and referentiality
Contrastive, given, new - encoding varieties of topic and focus
New perspectives on the NP/ DP debate
Micro-variation in subject realization and interpretation
Subject Extraction
Information structure and syntactic change
Experimental Approaches to Ellipsis
GLOWing Papers 2018
Formal Approaches to Dialectal Syntax
Rhotics in Phonological Theory
Resolving conflicts within and across modules
The Grammar of Dispositions
Unergative predicates. Architecture and variation
Beyond descriptive and metalinguistic negation
Participles: Form, Use and Meaning
The interpretation of the mass-count distinction across languages and populations
The Internal and External Syntax of Adverbial Clauses
Individuals, Communities, and Sound Change
Motivating Form in Morpho-syntax
Quantifier Scope
Acquisition of Quantification
Probabilistic grammars
Prosody and constituent structure
Suspended Affixation
*ABA
Marginal Contrasts
Perspective Taking
Focus concord constructions in Japanese and other languages
Headedness in Phonology
Partitives
Internally-Headed Relative Clauses
What drives syntactic computation?
Palatalization