In our paper, we deal with Germanic-Romance language contact, focusing on Cimbrian, a Germanic minority language spoken in Northern Italy. Specifically, we focus on the violation of the well-known that-trace filter, as it appears to be an interesting case of the superficial convergence that we ascribe to the status of T, which is either too rich (model language) or too weak (replica language) to represent a viable landing site for subject extraction.

Circumventing the ‘That-Trace’ Effect: Different Strategies between Germanic and Romance

Andrea padovan;Alessandra Tomaselli
2021-01-01

Abstract

In our paper, we deal with Germanic-Romance language contact, focusing on Cimbrian, a Germanic minority language spoken in Northern Italy. Specifically, we focus on the violation of the well-known that-trace filter, as it appears to be an interesting case of the superficial convergence that we ascribe to the status of T, which is either too rich (model language) or too weak (replica language) to represent a viable landing site for subject extraction.
2021
minority languages, that-trace violation, null subject parameter, Cimbrian, Bavarian
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11562/1043680
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