Maria Eugênia L. Duarte’s research while affiliated with Federal University of Rio de Janeiro and other places

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (1)


Figure 1. OVERT PRONOMINAL SUBJECT S T HROUGH SEVEN PERIODS
Figure 2. OVERT SUBJECTS ACCORDING TO GRAMMATICAL PERSON (%)  
Table 2 :
Figure 3. OVERT SUBJECTS IN SPOKEN "EP" AND "BP"  
Null Subjects in European and Brazilian Portuguese
  • Article
  • Full-text available

December 2005

·

1,640 Reads

·

162 Citations

Journal of Portuguese Linguistics

·

Maria Eugênia L. Duarte

·

The goals of this paper are twofold: a) to provide a structural account of the effects of the informal 'Avoid Pronoun Principle', proposed in Chomsky (1981: 65) for the Null Subject Languages (NSLs), and b) to compare, in European and Brazilian Portuguese (EP and BP), the distribution of the third person pronouns in its full and null forms, to check whether in written corpora BP incorporates signs of the ongoing loss of the null subject, largely attested in its contemporary spoken language. The strong theoretical claim is that in the Romance non-NSLs the pre-verbal subject is sitting in Spec of IP, while in the Romance NSLs it is Clitic Left-Dislocated (or is extracted by A-bar movement if it belongs to a restricted set of non-referential quantified expressions). The paper provides quantitative evidence that BP is losing the properties associated with the Null Subject Parameter. In its qualitative analysis, it shows that the contrasts between EP and BP are easily accounted for if the two derivations are assumed and if the null subjects in the two varieties are considered to be of a different nature: a pronoun in EP and a pronominal anaphor in BP.

Download

Citations (1)


... Based on a corpus of written newspaper interviews, Barbosa et al. (2005) report that 3 rd person overt and null pronoun subjects in EP are indeed realized along these lines: 22% of the subjects were realised by an overt pronoun and 78% were null subjects. Subject realisation was influenced by the position and distance of the antecedent: the lowest number of overt subjects occurred in intrasentential anaphoric contexts in which the subject of a subordinate clause referred to the subject of an adjacent main clause (3%) and in intersentential contexts in which the subject of a main clause relates to a subject antecedent in an immediately adjacent preceding main clause (11%). ...

Reference:

Overt Pronouns Are Challenging: Subject Realization in Written Narratives of Portuguese-French Bilingual School-Age Children
Null Subjects in European and Brazilian Portuguese

Journal of Portuguese Linguistics