Hybrid agreement as a conflict resolution strategy

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DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21248/hpsg.2006.13

Abstract

Situations in which conflicting constraints clash can potentially provide linguists with insights into the architecture of grammar. This paper deals with such a case. When predicative modifiers of morphologically rich languages head relative clauses, they are involved in two, sometimes conflicting, agreement relationships. Different languages adopt different strategies in order to resolve situations of conflicting constraints. This paper focuses on Standard Arabic and the hybrid agreement strategy which it employs. It argues that the HPSG theory of agreement, which distinguishes between morphosyntactic and semantic agreement, constitutes an appropriate framework for accounting for the phenomenon. In addition, it shows that contrary to claims made by Doron and Reintges (2005), a non-derivational framework such as HPSG is adequate for accounting for this non-trivial agreement pattern. Moreover, with a constructional approach, whereby constraints can target syntactic structures above the lexical level, better empirical coverage is achieved.

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Published

2006-10-15

How to Cite

Melnik, Nurit. 2006. Hybrid agreement as a conflict resolution strategy. Proceedings of the 13th International Conference on Head-Driven Phrase Structure Grammar 228–246. (doi:10.21248/hpsg.2006.13) (https://proceedings.hpsg.xyz/article/view/650) (Accessed April 19, 2024.)