| Eve V. Clark - 1995 - 268 sivua
...principles, each of which regulates the distribution and interpretation of one specific type of NP: Principle A — An anaphor must be bound in its governing category. Principle B — A pronoun must be free in its governing category. Principle C — expressions must be free everywhere.... | |
| Edwin L. Battistella - 1996 - 188 sivua
...from potential antecedents. They assume a standard description of binding principles, given below: Principle A: An anaphor must be bound in its governing...pronominal must be free in its governing category. Taking the governing category to be the domain of anaphoric relatedness and disjointness, Manzini and... | |
| Zygmunt Frajzyngier, Traci S. Curl - 2000 - 312 sivua
...but they have nothing to say about Russian. 4. For the ease of the reader (somewhat perfunctorily): Principle A 'an anaphor must be bound in its governing category'; Principle B 'a pronoun must be free in its governing category'; Principle C 'a referential expression must be free... | |
| André Meinunger - 2000 - 266 sivua
...Their distribution is restricted to certain structurally determined positions. (2) Binding Principles Principle A An anaphor must be bound in its governing category. ' Principle B A pronoun must not be bound (ie must be free) in its governing category. Principle C An R-expression... | |
| Birgit Gerlach, Janet Grijzenhout - 2000 - 462 sivua
...respectively by Principles A and B of the binding theory (Chomsky 1981), roughly stated in (2): (2) Principle A: An anaphor must be bound in its governing category. Principle B: A pronoun must be free in its governing category. If Binding Theory is part of UG and the Continuity... | |
| Silvina Montrul - 2004 - 436 sivua
...claiming that there is no null object phenomenon in child English. 23. Binding Principles (Chomsky 1981) Principle A: an anaphor must be bound in its governing category. Principle B: a pronoun must be free in its governing category. Principle C: an R-expression (NP) must be free. 24.... | |
| Walter Schweikert - 2005 - 360 sivua
...detect movement. For convenience I quote them here in the formulation given in Haegeman (1994: 228 f.): Principle A: An anaphor must be bound in its governing category Principle B: A pronoun must be free in its governing category Principle C: An R-expression must be free everywhere... | |
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