Affiliation:
1. Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU)
2. UiT The Arctic University of Norway
3. Pennsylvania State University
4. University of Greenwich (CREL)
Abstract
Abstract
Formal approaches to bi- and multilingual grammars rely on two important claims: (i) the grammatical architecture
should be able to deal with mono- and bi-/multilingual data without any specific constraints for the latter, (ii) features play a
pivotal role in accounting for patterns across and within grammars. In the present paper, it is argued that an exoskeletal
approach to grammar, which clearly distinguishes between the underlying syntactic features and their morphophonological
realizations (exponents), offers an ideal tool to analyze data from bi- and multilingual speakers. Specifically, it is shown that
this framework can subsume the specific mechanism of Feature Reassembly developed by Donna Lardiere since the
late 1990’s. Three case studies involving different languages and language combinations are offered in support of this claim,
demonstrating how an exoskeletal approach can be employed without any additional constraints or mechanisms.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Cited by
15 articles.
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