The purpose clause is a common fonn of adverbial modification in English. The bracketed phrases below are purpose clauses, and they look and sound unremarkable. We hear and see these things all the time. John came [to play with the children] [to play with] I brought John along Insofar as purpose clauses appear to be adverbial, they frequently occupy a relatively low place on the scale of important things for syntactic theory to address itself to. In this book I assume the theoretical framework that has come to be known as 'Government-Binding' theory (GB), initiated in Chomsky (1981). The general fonn of the analyis of purpose clauses in GB dates roughly from Chomsky (1977). where several kinds of constructions akin to purpose clauses are identified. Within GB. this analysis is so widely accepted that it deserves to be considered the standard theory. This book, then. is about a few syntactically peripheral ell~ments that have enjoyed a relatively long-lived. virtually universally accepted. theoretical treatment What is perhaps an obvious question arises in this context. Why write a GB book about purpose clauses? This book. I hope, will supply an interesting answer. Simply put. purpose clause:; , and related constructions, have various properties that are not accounted for in the standard theory. In this book I propose an alternative analysis of purpose clauses, an analysis from which. I think. more of their properties follow more naturally.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
I. Introduction. - 1. Two Theoretical Frameworks. - 2. Purpose Constructions. - II. External Syntax. - 1. Distinguishing Purpose Clauses. - 2. Adjunction of IOC and PC. - 3. Purpose Clauses as Adjuncts. - 4. Wh-Extraction. - III. Internal Syntax. - 1. Inside In Order Clauses. - 2. Inside Subject-Gap Purpose Clauses. - 3. Inside Object-Gap Purpose Clauses. - 4. The PP `Subject of OPC. - 5. PC and Be. - IV. Easy-Clauses. - 1. Easy-S . - 2. Easy-Clause = OPC. - 3. The New Tough Movement. - 4. Related Constructions. - V. Quantification. - 1. Quantification and Predication. - 2. Quantifying PRO arb. - 3. Control via Empty Operators. - 4. Conclusion. - VI. Control. - 1. A Semantics for Control. - 2. What is a ? -Role? . - 3. Control of Purpose Clauses. - 4. Generalized Control. - 5. Obligatory Control and the Argument/Adjunct Distinction. - VII. Conclusion. - Index of Names. - Index of Subjects.