2006
DOI: 10.1556/aling.53.2006.4.2
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Word order in Hungarian exclamatives

Abstract: This article revisits the (non)configurationality debate of the 80s and early 90s concerning Hungarian, a "free word order" language, which was shown during that period to be characterized by an articulate and, crucially, hierarchical preverbal domain, with A-bar positions dedicated to discourse functions such as topic and focus. What this debate did not conclusively settle, however, is the question whether or not the structure of A-positions in Hungarian is also configurational. The most prevalent, and indeed… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…It appears that the effect of Role described above is more compatible with a hierarchical VP, proposed in Surányi (2006) and É. Kiss (2008), where the base positions of subjects c-command those of objects.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 58%
“…It appears that the effect of Role described above is more compatible with a hierarchical VP, proposed in Surányi (2006) and É. Kiss (2008), where the base positions of subjects c-command those of objects.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 58%
“…These tests however yield varied results, with some supporting a symmetrical and others and an asymmetrical structural analysis. Some of this evidence will be presented here, but for a more detailed discussion the reader is directed to Surányi (2006b); É. Kiss (2008).…”
Section: Post-verbal Structurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The sentence in (28-a) is grammatical, because the anaphor in the object position is properly c-commanded, however the sentence in (28-b) is ungrammatical, supposedly because the anaphor in the subject position is not properly c-commanded by the antecedent in the object position. Hungarian sentences and judgements were taken from Surányi (2006b). This type of contradictory evidence has lead to two main theories being developed regarding the structure of the Hungarian VP.…”
Section: Post-verbal Structurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…While it has a configurational VP, the impression of free word order is created by (i) a free scrambling operation that can move arguments around (Surányi 2006b), (ii) the language's discourse configurational nature, which means that Hungarian makes use of an articulated left periphery to which focus and topic as well as quantificational material move (É. Kiss 1995, Szabolcsi 1997, and (iii) the relatively free ordering of postverbal elements in many contexts (É.…”
Section: The Clause Structure Of Hungarian: a Syntactic Overviewmentioning
confidence: 99%