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The syntax of postpositives in Classical Greek proseMarshall, Morrison H. B. January 1978 (has links)
Postpositives (in particular, aut-, u-, av, tls) , which do not stand in initial position, have a strong traditional tendency in early Greek word-order to stand in 'peninitial' (second) position; but by classical times this has been modified by frequent 'deferment' to later positions. The thesis is a preliminary to a study of the causes of deferment through comparison of peninitial and deferred instances in which the author has free choice between different word-orders, i.e. is constrained neither by rules associated with his dialect or period nor by habitual formulae. Rules, which reduce the number of 'possible' positions, are listed, and their exceptions studied, in Chapter Two, and Formulae, which may explain, by attraction to the position following particular words, individual cases of both peninitial position and deferment, in Chapter Three. In Chapter One, possible causes of deferment are discussed: 'unit-formation', 'colon-formation', 'formulaism', Comparison of passages in Homer and Herodotus suggests that in many cases these overlap, different causes reinforcing each other; this will make it difficult to eliminate the possibility that further causes may exist. Despite grounds for doubting that grammatical relations determine word-order, there are many cases where a deferred postpositive follows its most closely-related verb; it is revealed that the change from prevalence of peninitial position in Homer to deferment in Herodotus is accompanied more than anything else by an increase in the order verb--postpositive. This theme is continued in Chapter Two with the discovery in Rules XXIV ff. that not only does av not come later than directly after its verb but the others studied are similarly influenced by elements, verbal or substantial, to which they 'belong'; thus the problem of relations with the verb reduces in normal usage to two possibilities, either somewhere before or directly after; the latter is a primary phenomenon compatible with peninitial position but often causing deferment. The tables proving Rules XXV ff. reveal interesting patterns which may be stylometrically useful. In Chapter Four, the conclusions are summed up, and some applied to textual problems in the texts mainly studied (Thucydides, Plato, Demosthenes) and tentatively to detecting discrepancies of style in the spurious and suspected works of the Platonic corpus.
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On the syntax of derived nominals in English and Greek.Papadakis, Dimitrios. January 2009 (has links)
This study exammes different approaches to analysing the syntactic derivation of nouns from
verbs within the theoretical framework of Principles and Parameters (PP phrases by presenting a
contrastive study of English and Greek derived nominal expressions. The thesis discusses the
well-known distinction between result nominals and process nominals, and it demonstrates that,
in contrast to result nominals, process nominals license argument structure obligatorily and
can be modified by aspectual adverbials. It is shown that the role of functional categories is
crucial for an explanation of the differences between these two noun classes of derived
nominals. In particular, it is suggested, following a proposal by Alexiadou (2001), that the
verbal functional categories vP and AspectP are projected with process nominals, but not with
result nominals. This analysis also accounts for the derivation of Greek nouns from
ergative/unaccusative verbs, but it also explains the projection of the patient/theme as the
internal argument of a result nominal and the aspectual modification of passive nominals. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2009.
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