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ÀϽÃ: °ÝÁÖ Åä¿äÀÏ 2:00-6:00

Àå¼Ò: ´ë±¸½Ã Áö»êµ¿ º¹À½¼±±³°ü 5Ãþ ÇÐȸ ȸÀǽÇ
322Â÷ 2004³â 5¿ù 29ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ Cyclic Linearization


321Â÷ 2004³â 5¿ù 8ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓä°æ Linearity in Syntax (ÀÚ·áÁý 2003-1)


320Â÷ 2004³â 4¿ù 24ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÌÀçö On Wh-Movement


319Â÷ 2004³â 4¿ù 3ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ Generalized Head Movement Constraint


318Â÷ 2004³â 3¿ù 20ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ T-to C Movement


317Â÷ 2004³â 3¿ù 6ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ T-to C Movement


316Â÷ 2004³â 2¿ù 18ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ À̱ÙÈñ On Multiple Wh Fronting


315Â÷ 2004³â 1¿ù 28ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ HG, OS and [Focus] feature


314Â÷ 2004³â 1¿ù 7ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ Remarks on Holmberg's Generalization

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313Â÷ 2003³â 12¿ù 27ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ Remarks on Holmberg's Generalization


312Â÷ 2003³â 12¿ù 13ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓä°æ OS, Scrambling, and PIC


311Â÷ 2003³â 11¿ù 29ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓä°æ OS, Scrambling, and PIC


310
Â÷ 2003³â 11¿ù 8ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¸í¹è Toward a typology of focus and focus constructions


309
Â÷ 2003³â 10¿ù 25ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¸í¹è Toward a typology of focus and focus constructions


308
Â÷ 2002³â 10¿ù 4ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¸í¹è Toward a typology of focus and focus constructions


307
Â÷ 2003³â 9¿ù 20ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓä°æ Phrasal Stress and Syntax


306
Â÷ 2003³â 9¿ù 6ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ À̱ÙÈñ Locality of Movement


305
Â÷ 2003³â 8¿ù 23ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±èÈñÅ "Antecedent-Contained Deletion and the Copy Theory of Movement"
304Â÷ 2003³â 8¿ù 9ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ Movement out of CP


303
Â÷ 2003³â 7¿ù 26ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ Movement out of CP


302Â÷ 2003³â 7¿ù 12ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ The EPP and Scrambling


301
Â÷ 2003³â 6¿ù 28ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ The EPP and Scrambling


300
Â÷ 2003³â 6¿ù 14ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ ECM construction in English


299Â÷ 2003³â 5¿ù 31ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓä°æ The Verb "Be" and Cleft Sentences


298Â÷ 2003³â 5¿ù 3ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓä°æ Topic and IP
297Â÷

2003³â 4¿ù 19ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓä°æ Noun Classes in English


296Â÷ 2003³â 3¿ù 22ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ Person Constraints and other related topics


295Â÷ 2003³â 3¿ù 8ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ


294Â÷ 2003³â 2¿ù 8ÀÏ
À̱ÙÈñ Locality Theory: Competing Models of Weak Islands( Manzini. The Linguistic Review,1999)


293Â÷ 2003³â 1¿ù 25ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±èÈñÅ Unaccusativity at the Syntax-Lexical Semantics Interface


292Â÷ 2003³â 1¿ù 11ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓä°æ Sentence Processing and Some Ambiguous Structures

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291Â÷ 2002³â 12¿ù 28ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓä°æ Processing of Garden-Path Sentences


290Â÷ 2002³â 12¿ù 14ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ À̱ÙÈñ Local Economy and Generalized Pied Piping( Hiroyuki Ura 1999)


289Â÷ 2002³â 11¿ù 30ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±èÇп¬ Scrambling and Last Resort(Boskovic & Takahashi 1998)


288Â÷ 2002³â 11¿ù 9ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ "That-t effect's cross-linguistically and successive cyclic movement"
287Â÷ 2002³â 10¿ù 26ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ


286Â÷ 2002³â 10¿ù 12ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±èÈñÅÂ


285Â÷ 2002³â 9¿ù 28ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±èÈñÅÂ


284Â÷ 2002³â 9¿ù 7ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÃÖ¿õȯ George & Kornfilt Hypothesis Revisited


283Â÷ 2002³â 8¿ù 24ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ Nominative-Genitive Conversion


282Â÷ 2002³â 7¿ù 27ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ Nominative-Genitive Conversion


281Â÷ 2002³â 6¿ù 29ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ On Nominative-Genitive Conversion


280Â÷ 2002³â 6¿ù 15ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ On Nominative-Genitive Conversion


279Â÷ 2002³â 5¿ù 4ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓä°æ ÃÖ±Ù³í¹®¸ðÀ½ SPEC-ifying the GF "subject"(Epstein & Seely)


278Â÷ 2002³â 4¿ù 13ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓä°æ ÃÖ±Ù³í¹®¸ðÀ½ SPEC-ifying the GF "subject"(Epstein & Seely)


277Â÷ 2002³â 3¿ù 30ÀÏ
À̱ÙÈñ Extraposition and Scope: A Case for Overt QR

276Â÷ 2002³â 3¿ù 16ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ ÃÖ±Ù ³í¹®¸ðÀ½Áý (A-Movement and EPP)


275Â÷ 2002³â 3¿ù 2ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ ³í¹® ¸ðÀ½Áý(A-Movement and EPP)

274Â÷ 2002³â 2¿ù 2ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓä°æ ÃֽŠ³í¹®¸ðÀ½Áý


273Â÷ 2002³â 1¿ù 19ÀÏ
±³Àç ÃÖ±ÙÅë»ç·Ð ÀÚ·á ¸ðÀ½Áý ¹× À¯Àι°


272Â÷ 2002³â 1¿ù 5ÀÏ
±³Àç ÃÖ±Ù Åë»ç·Ð ³í¹® ¸ðÀ½Áý

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271Â÷ 2001³â 12¿ù 22ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ ÃÖ±Ù ³í¹® ¸ðÀ½Áý


270Â÷ 2001³â 12¿ù 8ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¸í¹è ÃÖ±Ù³í¹® ¸ðÀ½Áý


269Â÷ 2001³â 11¿ù 24ÀÏ
±³Àç ÃÖ±Ù Åë»ç·Ð ÀÚ·á ¸ðÀ½Áý


268Â÷ 2001³â 11¿ù 10ÀÏ
±³Àç ÃÖ±Ù Åë»ç·Ð ³í¹® ¸ðÀ½Áý


267Â÷ 2001³â 10¿ù 20ÀÏ
±³Àç Step by Step


266Â÷ 2001³â 10¿ù 6ÀÏ
±³Àç Hiraiwa ³í¹®
"Multiple Agree and the Defective Intervention Constraint in Japanese"


265Â÷ 2001³â 9¿ù 23ÀÏ
³»¿ë Chomsky (2000)
264Â÷ 2001³â 9¿ù 8ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ " Minimalist Inquiries, the Frame Work" in Step by Step.


263Â÷ 2001³â 8¿ù 11ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ " Minimalist Inquiries, the Frame Work" in Step by Step.


262Â÷ 2001³â 7¿ù 3ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ " Minimalist Inquiries, the Frame Work" in Step by Step.


261Â÷ 2001³â 7¿ù 14ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ " Minimalist Inquiries, the Frame Work" in Step by Step.


260Â÷ 2001³â 6¿ù 30ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ À̱ÙÈñ 'Step by Step'ÀÇ Chapter 1
'Minimalism and Asymmetric Wh-Interpretation'


259Â÷ 2001³â 6¿ù 16ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ À̱ÙÈñ Step by StepÀÇ Á¦2Àå, "Sometimes in [Spec CP] Sometimes in Situ"
258Â÷ 2001³â 6¿ù 2ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓä°æ Multiple Interfaces


257Â÷ 2001³â 5¿ù 12ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓä°æ Person Constraint in Expletive Constructions


256Â÷ 2001³â 4¿ù 28ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±èµ¿¼® Multiple Agree and Intervention


255Â÷ 2001³â 4¿ù 14ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ Remarks on "Derivation by Phase"


254Â÷ 2001³â 3¿ù 31ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ
253Â÷

2001³â 3¿ù 17ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓä°æ ±¹¾îÀÇ ¿©°ÝÁÖ¾î
±è¸í¹è ·Î¸Á½º¾îÀÇ EPP


252Â÷ 2001³â 2¿ù 3ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ À̱ÙÈñ Is the Binding Necessary?


251Â÷ 2001³â 1¿ù 6ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ À̱ÙÈñ, ±èÇп¬
±³Àç Working Minimalism


250Â÷ 2001³â 1¿ù 20ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓä°æ Working MinimalismÀÇ 12Àå
À̱ÙÈñ Çö´ë¹®¹ý¿¬±¸ 22ÁýÀÇ "Is the Binding Theory Necessary?"


249Â÷ 2001³â 1¿ù 6ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ À̱ÙÈñ, ±èÇп¬
±³Àç Working Minimalism

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248Â÷ 2000³â 12¿ù 23ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ, ±èâ±Ù
±³Àç working minimalism
247Â÷

2000³â 12¿ù 9ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ, ±èâ±Ù Woking Minimalism


246Â÷ 2000³â 11¿ù 25ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ, ±è¸í¹è
245Â÷ 2000³â 11¿ù 11ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¸í¹è Case,the EPP,and Minimalism
À̱ÙÈñ Cyclicity and Minimalism


244Â÷ 2000³â 10¿ù 28ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¸í¹è, ÀÌÀçö


243Â÷ 2000³â 9¿ù 30ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓä°æ The Structure of the to-Infinitive
±èÇп¬ Raising the Case of Expletives


242Â÷ 2000³â 9¿ù 16ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±èµ¿¼® ±³¼ö


241Â÷ 2000³â 8¿ù 26ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ À̱ÙÈñ On Attract F and the Minimal Link Condition
ÀÌÀçö Some Consequences of Attract F


240Â÷ 2000³â 8¿ù 12ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÌÀçö Movement and Control
À̱ÙÈñ Raised Objects and Superiority


239Â÷ 2000³â 7¿ù 29ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±èâ±Ù, À̱ÙÈñ


238Â÷ 2000³â 7¿ù 15ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¸í¹è ¿µ¾î¹ß´Þ¿¡ ¹ÌÄ£ ÀÌŸ®¾îÀÇ ¿µÇâ
ÀÓä°æ ¿µÇѱâ°è¹ø¿ªÀÇ ÇöȲ


237Â÷ 2000³â 7¿ù 1ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÌÀçö LF pied-piping of in-situ wh-phrases


236Â÷ 2000³â 6¿ù 17ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓä°æ Lexical Insertion Everywhere


235Â÷ 2000³â 6¿ù 3ÀÏ
234Â÷ 2000³â 5¿ù 6ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ À̱ÙÈñ The fine structure of wh-movement and the proper formulation of the EC,. John Frampton, Linguistic Review (1999)
À°ÁØÃ¶ Comoeting models of weak islands.Manzini, Linguistic Review(1999)
±Ç¿ëÅ 4Â÷¿øÀÇ ¿µ¾î¼¼°è


233Â÷ 2000³â 4¿ù 22ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±èÈñÅ A Note on Pseduogapping (LasnikÀÇ ±³Á¦ Á¦7Àå )
À°ÁØÃ¶ On Certain Structural Aspects of Anapora( LasnikÀÇ ±³Á¦ Á¦ 7Àå)
±Ç¿µÅ 4Â÷¿ø ÀÇ ¿µ¾î ¼¼°è


232Â÷ 2000³â 4¿ù 11ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±èâ±Ù LasnikÀÇ Ã¥ Á¦ 6Àå
±èÈñÅ LasnikÀÇ Ã¥ Á¦ 7Àå
±Ç¿ëÅÂ(Ư°­) 4Â÷¿øÀÇ ¿µ¾î¼¼°è


231Â÷ 2000³â 3¿ù 25ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±èÇп¬ 3Àå
ÀÓä°æ 4Àå


230Â÷ 2000³â 3¿ù 11ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±èµ¿¼®: 3Àå,Lectures on Minimalist Syntax
±èÇп¬: 4Àå,Case and Expletives Revised
ÀÓä°æ: 5Àå, Verbal Morphology


229Â÷ 2000³â 2¿ù 26ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ
±³Àç
LasnikÀÇ Minimalist Analysis Á¦1Àå

228Â÷ 2000³â 1¿ù 15ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓä°æ: Raising Quantifiers without Quantifier Raising

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227Â÷ 1999³â 12¿ù 11ÀÏ
³»¿ë: Derivation by Phase (Chomsky 1999) ¹× Multiple Spell Out (Uriagereka 1999)ÀÇ ÈĹݺÎ


226Â÷ 1999³â 11¿ù 27ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±èµ¿¼® Derivation by Phase (Chomsky 1999)
±è¿ëÇÏ Multiple Spell Out (Uriagereka 1999)


225Â÷ 1999³â 10¿ù 30ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±èµ¿¼® Minimalist Inquiries: the Framework (N. Chomsky)
±è¿ëÇÏ Multiple Spell Out (J. Uriagereka)


224Â÷ 1999³â 10¿ù 16ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±èÈñÅÂ: The rightward analysis of WH-movement in ASL
±èâ±Ù: Aspects of root infinitives
À°ÁØÃ¶: Two types of wh-features


223Â÷ 1999³â 10¿ù 2ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÌÀçö: Phasal Movement and Its Kin ( Pesetsky )
ÀÓ»óºÀ: How Childen's Relative solve a problem for Minimalism
±èÈñÅÂ: The Rightword Analysis of Wh-movement in ASL.


220Â÷ 1999³â 8¿ù 7ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓä°æ: Reflexives: Binding and Chains
±è¿ëÇÏ: Events, Agents and VP Shells


219Â÷ 1999³â 7¿ù 24ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ À°ÁØÃ¶: Clause Structure
±èÇп¬: Structure of Left Periphery


218Â÷ 1999³â 7¿ù 10ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÌÀçö: Perfect Chains
±è¸í¹è: The Best Clitic: Constraint Conflict in Morphosyntax


217Â÷ 1999³â 6¿ù 28ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓ±âÈ«: Subjecthood and Subject Position


216Â÷ 1999³â 6¿ù 12ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±èÈñÅÂ: Thematic Roles and Syntactic Structure
ÀÌÀçö: À̵¿ÀÚ¿Í À¯ÀÎÀÚÀÇ ±¹ºÎ¼º Á¶°Ç


215Â÷ 1999³â 5¿ù 29ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±èâ±Ù: Elements of Grammar


214Â÷ 1999³â 4¿ù 24ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓä°æ: Psch-Verbs and VP Shell


213Â÷ 1999³â 4¿ù 10ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ À°ÁØÃ¶: Superiority Effects
ÀÓ±âÈ«: Bare NP Adverbial


212Â÷ 1999³â 3¿ù 27ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±èµ¿¼®: Uninterpretability as Feature Dislocation in the Lexicon
±èÈñÅÂ: Scope and the VP Shell


211Â÷ 1999³â 3¿ù 13ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ: Minimalism, Scope and VP Structure
±èµ¿¼®: From Attract to Agree


210Â÷ 1999³â 2¿ù 27ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ À̽Âö: Universality of Functional Categories
ÀÌÀçö: Shortest MOve vs. Fewest Steps


209Â÷ 1999³â 1¿ù 30ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ À°ÁØÃ¶: Shortest Move and Object Case Checking
±èÈñÅÂ: Participles and Bare Argument Structure


208Â÷ 1999³â 1¿ù 15ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓä°æ: Raising Quantifiers without Quantifier Raising

¡ãback to top


207Â÷ 1998³â 12¿ù 26ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿µ¼®: Clause Structures, Expletives
±è¿ëÇÏ: Procrastinate


206Â÷ 1998³â 12¿ù 12ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±èÈñÅÂ: The Minimal Links of Verb Raising
±è¿ëÇÏ: Shortest Derivation and Timing Effects


205Â÷ 1998³â 11¿ù 14ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±èâ±Ù: Last Resort
±èÈñÅÂ: Procrastinate


204Â÷ 1998³â 10¿ù 24ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÌÀçö: Quotative Inversion
±èµ¿¼®: Phrase Structure


203Â÷ 1998³â 10¿ù 10ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿µ¼®: Local Economy


202Â÷ 1998³â 9¿ù 26ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓä°æ: Does English Really Have Case?
¾ÈÁ¾¿À: Learning Strategies and Production Strategies
À°ÁØÃ¶: LF Movement and the MInimalist Program


201Â÷ 1998³â 9¿ù 12ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±è¿ëÇÏ: Chapter 10, Agreement Projections
±èµ¿¼®: The Minimalism: Basic Assumptions and Prospects


200Â÷ 1998³â 8¿ù 22ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ¹Ú±Ý·Ï: Chapter 8, A Movement
À°ÁØÃ¶: Chapter 9, VP Shells


199Â÷ 1998³â 8¿ù 8ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓä°æ: Chapter 5, Head Movement
±èµ¿¼®: Chapter 6, Operator Movement
À°ÁØÃ¶: Chapter 7, Subjects


198Â÷ 1998³â 7¿ù 25ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ À±Èñ¼ö: Chapter 3, Structure
±èÈñÅÂ: Chapter 4, Empty Categories


197Â÷ 1998³â 7¿ù 11ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ÀÓä°æ: A. Radford's Syntax, A Minimalist Introduction Chapter 1, Grammar
±è¿µ¼®: Chapter 2, Categories


196Â÷ 1998³â 6¿ù 27ÀÏ
¹ßÇ¥ÀÚ ±èµ¿¼®: Category Raising Adjunction, and Minimality


  Á¦ 195Â÷ 1998³â 6¿ù 13ÀÏ
À±Èñ¼ö: Corpus Linguistics Copora Are Becoming Mainstream

¾ÈÁ¾¿À: Teaching Writing in the ESL Context  


Á¦ 194 Â÷ 1998³â 5¿ù 9ÀÏ

±è¸í¹è: Contrastive Focusing
 


Á¦ 193 Â÷ 1998³â
4¿ù 25ÀÏ
±è¸í¹è: Topic-Referring Subjects
ÀÌÀçö: Selection and the Categorial Status of Infinitival Complement   Á¦


192 Â÷ 1998³â 4¿ù 11ÀÏ

¾ÈÁ¾¿À: Functional Tasks for Teaching

ÀÓä°æ: Eagativity
 


Á¦ 191 Â÷ 1998³â 3¿ù 28ÀÏ

±èÈñÅÂ: Super-Raising and the Feature-Based X-Bar Theory

ÀÓä°æ: An Optimality Theoretic Typology of Case and Grammatical Voice System
 


Á¦ 190 Â÷ 1998³â 3¿ù 14ÀÏ

ÀÌÀçö: The Distribution of Non-NP Categories
±èµ¿¼®: Have Faith in Syntax



Á¦ 189 Â÷ 1998³â 2¿ù 7ÀÏ
ÀÓä°æ: Optimality Theory in Binding

±è¸í¹è: ÀÌŸ®¾î ¿µÁÖ¾îÀÇ ±â¿ø¿¡ ´ëÇÏ¿©

±èµ¿¼®: Complementizers, Faithfulness, and Optimality  


Á¦ 188 Â÷ 1998³â 1¿ù 24ÀÏ

±èÇп¬: ÃÖÀûÁÖ¾î
±è¿µ¼®: Optimality and wh-Extraction
±èµ¿¼®(´ë±¸´ëÇб³): Projection, Heads, and Optimality


  Á¦ 187 Â÷ 1998³â 1¿ù 10ÀÏ
±èµ¿¼®: Inversion, Optimal Subjects, and wh-Extraction

ÀÓä°æ(´ë±¸¿¹¼ú´ëÇб³): Optimality and Economy of Expression

¡ãback to top

 

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