Case: Its Principles and its Parameters
Cambridge Studies in Linguistics
In Case, Mark Baker develops a unified theory of how the morphological case marking of noun phrases is determined by syntactic structure. Designed to work well for languages of all alignment types – accusative, ergative, tripartite, marked nominative, or marked absolutive – this theory has been developed and tested against unrelated languages of each type, and more than twenty non-Indo-European languages are considered in depth. While affirming that case can be assigned to noun phrases by function words under agreement, the theory also develops in detail a second mode of case assignment: so-called dependent case. Suitable for academic researchers and students, the book employs formal-generative concepts yet remains clear and accessible for a general linguistics readership.
• Presents a unified theory of morphological case phenomena
• Draws on and presents data from roughly twenty unrelated languages
• Employs formal-generative concepts yet remains clear and accessible to the general linguistics reader
Language: GB
Level: Native Speaker / Teacher
CFK | 415
Mark Baker – Cambridge University Press