studies:graduation:thesis:topics:linguistics
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studies:graduation:thesis:topics:linguistics [2019-11-28 19:26] – Péter Szigetvári | studies: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. |
- | These topics | + | == Irina Burukina, Marcel den Dikken, Mark Newson, Krisztina Szécsényi |
+ | Â | ||
+ | # The syntax and morphology of tense and aspect in English: How many tenses and aspects | ||
+ | # 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' | ||
+ | # 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., // | ||
+ | # 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/ | ||
+ | # 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 // | ||
+ | # 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? | ||
+ | # Inversion of the subject and the finite verb occurs in a variety | ||
+ | # 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' | ||
+ | # Light verbs (//__make__ a turn, __take__ a walk//): How are these best represented in syntax? Do they have meaning? | ||
+ | # Different ways of expressing causation in English (lexical causatives, morphological causatives, //make// causatives, //have// causatives, // | ||
+ | # The special syntax of English news headlines and other forms of ' | ||
+ | # 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? | ||
+ | # Different strategies in forming // | ||
+ | # 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/ | * Multiword items classified in various English (and Hungarian) sources/ | ||
- | * Regular polysemy types in English (and Hungarian): //a heavy book// vs //a difficult book//; //a chicken// vs //some chicken.// | + | * Regular polysemy types in English (and Hungarian): //a heavy book// vs //a difficult book; a chicken// vs //some chicken.// |
* Instances of word forms of a lexeme having different/ | * Instances of word forms of a lexeme having different/ | ||
* Word families vs lexical/ | * Word families vs lexical/ |
studies/graduation/thesis/topics/linguistics.1574965614.txt.gz · last touched 2019-11-28 19:26 by Péter Szigetvári