Understanding and Teaching the Indirect Object in Spanish 1st Edition by Luis H González – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery:1032519398, 9781032519395
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Product details:
ISBN 10: 1032519398
ISBN 13: 9781032519395
Author: Luis H. González
Table of contents:
1 Subject and direct object or verber and verbed?
1.1 Native speakers are computing verber and verbed, not subject and direct object
1.2 How verbed reveals a difference that subject hides
1.3 Sentences with three participants
1.4 Verbees in Spanish (and other languages) that are not expressed as verbees in English
Notes
References
2 Distinguishing some direct objects from an indirect object can be a puzzle; distinguishing a verbe
2.1 Introduction
2.2 Distinguishing some direct objects from an indirect object can be a puzzle; distinguishing a ver
2.3 False verbees, true verbees, dialectal leísmo, and general leísmo: everything is connected
2.4 In the classroom
2.5 Conclusions
2.6 Exercises
Notes
References
3 Against the need for 11 or more types of sentences with an indirect object in Spanish and in other
3.1 Eleven types of sentences with a dative (an indirect object) in Spanish
3.2 The verbee in three-participant sentences and in two-participant sentences
3.2.1 Sentences with verber, verbed, and verbee
3.2.2 Sentences with verber, [verbed], and verbee
3.2.3 Sentences with verbee and verbed (verberless sentences)
3.3 Types of sentences with a dative (an indirect object) in four other languages
3.3.1 Types of sentences with an indirect object in Latin (Van Hoecke 1996: 3–37)
3.3.2 Types of sentences with an indirect object in Portuguese (de Andrade Berlinck 1996: 119–151)
3.3.3 Types of datives with an indirect object in French (Melis 1996: 40–51). Three-term construct
3.3.4 Types of sentences with an indirect object in Polish (Rudzka-Ostyn 1996: 341–394)
3.4 Connecting verber, verbed, and verbee in Polish, in Italian, and in other languages
3.5 In the classroom
3.6 Conclusions
Notes
References
4 A pronoun does not double its indirect object; the latter drops when it is known information in po
4.1 Does a pronoun “double” its indirect object or does the indirect object drop when it is know
4.2 Indirect object pronoun doubling turned upside down
4.3 Is accusative a (personal a) the same as the a that introduces an indirect object?
4.4 Postverbal verbee drop (when known information/world knowledge) encompasses several rules of ind
4.4.1 Three rules of indirect object doubling with a pronoun in Gutiérrez Ordóñez (1999)
4.4.2 Rules of indirect object (and direct object) pronoun doubling in RAE/ASALE (2010)
4.4.3 Other rules of indirect object pronoun “doubling”
4.5 Some evidence against the distinction between argumental and non argumental indirect objects
4.6 Verbee drop in the classroom
4.7 Conclusions
4.8 Exercises (answers provided)
Notes
References
Index
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Luis H González,Understanding,Teaching