A considerable number of German dialects exhibit doubled R-pronouns with pronominal adverbs
(dadamit, dadafür, dadagegen). At first sight, this type of in situ
replication seems to be completely redundant since its occurrence is independent of R-pronoun extraction/movement.
The main purpose of this paper is to account for (i) the difference between dialects with regard to replication
of R-pronouns and (ii) why an (apparently redundant) process of replication occurs. Following Müller (2000a),
who considers R-pronouns to be a repair phenomenon, we present an analysis in the framework of
Optimality Theory. We argue that replication of R-pronouns is a consequence of different rankings of
universal requirements like e.g. the Inclusiveness Condition, the Lexical Integrity
Hypothesis and Antilocality and that the interaction of these constraints results
in the occurrence of replication.
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