ABSTRACT

This book collects some of the most significant articles by Adriana Belletti published over the last ten years or so, offering readers a useful tool to see the mutual enrichment between linguistic theory and experimental studies on (modes of) language acquisition through her work.

The volume explores domains of theoretical morphosyntax in the generative tradition and theoretically guided studies on language acquisition. An introduction specific to this volume contextualizes these contributions within ongoing developments in the field. Part I presents studies inspired by the illuminating interchange between linguistic theory and experimentation in the domain of language acquisition, leading to the formulation of explicit research questions tested experimentally and guiding in the proper interpretation of the results. Part II offers refined, detailed theoretical analyses of domains in which peripheral positions in the clause structures are crucially involved to express discourse contents, in sometimes not standard ways during development.

Demonstrating how refined linguistic analyses play a crucial role in interpreting the peculiar shape of developmental data, this book will be of interest to scholars in syntax, language acquisition, and theoretical linguistics.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

Theoretical implications and the role of acquisition results: an overview

part I|188 pages

Types of syntactic computations in the clausal architecture

chapter 1|36 pages

Relatives and passive object relatives in Italian-speaking children and adults

Intervention in production and comprehension

chapter 7|30 pages

Labeling (Romance) causatives

part II|89 pages

At the peripheries

chapter 9|12 pages

On Fin

Italian che, Japanese no, and the selective properties of the copula in clefts

chapter 10|18 pages

The focus map of clefts

Extraposition and predication

chapter 11|21 pages

Revisiting the CP of clefts

chapter 13|15 pages

Objects and subjects in the left periphery

The case of a-Topics