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studies:graduation:thesis:topics:linguistics [2019-11-06 14:25] – [Péter A. Lázár] Péter Szigetváristudies:graduation:thesis:topics:linguistics [2019-11-30 12:55] (current) – [Irina Burukina, Marcel den Dikken, Mark Newson, Krisztina Szécsényi] Péter Szigetvári
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 = linguistics = linguistics
  
->> under construction+These topics are suggested by DELG staff to students planning to write their BA thesis in linguistics.  They only serve as an appetizer.  You may come up with any other topic and convince a member of DELG to supervise you and that topic.  You may also select a supervisor different from the one offering your topic.
  
-These topics are suggested by DELG staff.  They only serve as an appetizer You may come up with any other topic and convince member of DELG to supervise you and that topic You may also select supervisor different from the one offering your topic.+== Irina Burukina, Marcel den Dikken, Mark Newson, Krisztina SzĂ©csĂ©nyi 
 + 
 +# The syntax and morphology of tense and aspect in English: How many tenses and aspects are there? What is the relationship between tense/aspect and finiteness? Is there a genuine future tense in English?  How does the marking of tense, aspect and futurity in English compare to that in other languages? 
 +# The subjunctive mood in English: Does it exist and, if so, under which circumstances do we find it? What is the relationship between the subjunctive and imperative mood? 
 +# How can the differences and similarities between topicalisation (//This dish I wouldn't recommend to anyone//), focus fronting (//Only this dish would I recommend//), 'heavy NP shift' (//I wouldn't recommend to anyone a dish prepared by this chef//) and dislocation (both left-dislocation, as in //This dish, I wouldn't recommend it//, and right-dislocation, as in //I wouldn't recommend it, this dish//) be modelled in a syntactic analysis of these phenomena? 
 +# Cleft (//It is a pizza that he is eating//) and pseudo-cleft (//What he is eating is a pizza//, //A pizza is what he is eating//) sentences: How does their syntax work? What are they useful for? 
 +# Degrees of comparison in the adjectival system, and the interaction between morphology and syntax: e.g., //pleasanter// ~ //more pleasant; most quickly// ~ //the most quickly; dumb// ~ //a lot more dumb// ~ //more dumb than cruel// (metalinguistic comparison). 
 +# The placement of adverbial modifiers in the English clause: pre- //vs// post-modal adverbial insertion (//He likely will say yes// ~ //He will likely say yes; He likely won't say yes// ~ //He won't likely say yes//); the distribution of the split infinitive (//I decided to fully describe it / fully to describe it / to describe it fully//). 
 +# The distribution of the quantifiers //some// and //any// in negative and non-negative clauses: syntax and semantics (//I don't want to talk to somebody/anybody; If somebody/anybody tries to take my place; I wonder if somebody/anybody could help me//). 
 +# The status of //that// in restrictive relatives: relative pronoun or complementiser (//the man who/that I saw//, //the man to who(m)/*to that I spoke, *the man who that I saw//)? 
 +# The status of //if// and //whether//: complementiser or something else (//I am wondering// //{whether/*if} to go, It depends on {whether/*if} he's there, {Whether/*if} or not he did it remains an open question//)? 
 +# Sentential //vs// constituent negation: How does the distinction manifest itself, in English and other languages? Is the distinction syntactically real, and, if so, how is it represented in syntax? 
 +# The English determiner system: How many different types of determiners can be distinguished? Are these all treatable in syntax as representatives of the category D (for 'determiner')? If not, what would be the most appropriate treatment(s) of determiner-like elements that are not exponents of the head D? 
 +# Inversion of the subject and the finite verb occurs in variety of different contexts in English: root interrogatives (//Have you eaten yet?//, //What are you eating?//); root- and non-root clauses featuring fronting of a negative constituent (//Under no circumstances would they accept this; It is reported that under no circumstances would they accept this//) sentences; conditionals (//Had you been more diligent, you would have been more successful//); locative inversion (//On this wall hung a picture of the president//)Discuss the syntax of inversion in English in as comprehensive way as possible. 
 +# Typical errors made by non-native learners of English: (a) the use of English articles (//He became pilot, I love the music// (as a generic statement about music in general), //Budapest of my youth//); (b) English word-order (//Who did take my pen?, Why you are doing this?, *Near Budapest have they a house//). What can the theory of syntax take away from or contribute to an understanding of these errors? 
 +# The English genitive: Are //’s// and //of// exponents of the same syntactic category or not? How to analyse the co-occurrence of //’s// and //of// in expressions such as //a friend of John's//? What should the syntax say about special uses of //’s// and //of// in constructions such as //men's room, a city of great beauty, that jewel of a city, the City of London//. 
 +# Light verbs (//__make__ a turn, __take__ a walk//): How are these best represented in syntax? Do they have meaning?  If so, is their meaning constant or variable? 
 +# Different ways of expressing causation in English (lexical causatives, morphological causatives, //make// causatives, //have// causatives, //cause+to// causatives): What are the syntactic differences and similarities between them? 
 +# The special syntax of English news headlines and other forms of 'abbreviated English' or telegraphic speech. 
 +# Accusative pronouns in English: How can we account for their distribution (//I want him to leave; Who wants to leave? Me!; Me and him are good mates; Him walking out like that was rude; Poor me!; Him a vegetarian?! No way!; What would you rather me say?//)? 
 +# Different strategies in forming //wh//-questions in English and cross-linguistically: //wh//-fronting (//What did he buy?//); //wh-in-situ// (e.g., in 'quiz master questions' (//John F. Kennedy was shot in which American city?//), and in 'echo questions' (//He bought WHAT?!//)); fronting just one //wh//-phrase or all of them in multiple //wh//-questions (//Who bought what?// ~ Hungarian //Ki mit vett?//); the 'superiority effect' (//Who bought what?// ~ *//What did who buy?// ~ //Which book did which person buy?//). 
 +# The Uniformity of Theta Assignment Hypothesis and a comprehensive syntactic representation of the distribution of the Theme (//They took the pirates off the ship; The pirates walked off the ship; The pirates are off the ship; With the pirates off the ship, the voyage can finally continue; As soon as they have left the gangplank, I consider the pirates off the ship//).
  
 == Zoltán G. Kiss == Zoltán G. Kiss
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 * Multiword items classified in various English (and Hungarian) sources/frameworks. * Multiword items classified in various English (and Hungarian) sources/frameworks.
-* Regular polysemy types in English (and Hungarian): //a heavy book// vs //a difficult book////a chicken// vs //some chicken.//  How language (type) has a role.+* Regular polysemy types in English (and Hungarian): //a heavy book// vs //a difficult book; a chicken// vs //some chicken.//  How language (type) has a role.
 * Instances of word forms of a lexeme having different/restricted/special senses: //in my eyes// vs //a black eye.// * Instances of word forms of a lexeme having different/restricted/special senses: //in my eyes// vs //a black eye.//
 * Word families vs lexical/semantic fields. * Word families vs lexical/semantic fields.
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 * How many degrees of stress are there in English? * How many degrees of stress are there in English?
 * The sound system of Hunglish * The sound system of Hunglish
 +
 +== MiklĂłs Törkenczy
 +
 +* Flapping after sonorant consonants in English accents
 +* //CĂ pi//[Éľ]//alĂ­stic// vs. //mìli//[t]//arĂ­stic//: the (non)applicability of    flapping in “identical” environments
 +* “Yod-dropping” in unstressed syllables
 +* The phonology of the irregular past
 +* How regular is English stress?
 +* The stressing of compounds: patterns and predictability
 +* Stress clash (adjacent stresses) in words.
 +* Socially conditioned phonological variation in English
  
  
studies/graduation/thesis/topics/linguistics.1573046748.txt.gz · last touched 2019-11-06 14:25 by Péter Szigetvári