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Chapter 3 discusses how subject–verb agreement and agreement within noun phrases are realized in European and Brazilian Portuguese and proposes a reinterpretation of the traditional analysis of agreement with personal pronouns in Portuguese.
Chapter 5 discusses possible orders other than SVO in European and Brazilian Portuguese and the discourse and morphophonological factors that trigger them
Chapter 7 discusses affirmation, negation, yes/no (polar) questions, and answers in European and Brazilian Portuguese, paying special attention to the way in which each variety grammatically encodes these locutions in non-neutral contexts.
Chapter 2 describes the feature composition of personal pronouns in European and Brazilian Portuguese, focusing on their similarities and differences with respect to each grammatical person.
Chapter 8 reviews the major syntactic similarities and differences between European Portuguese and Brazilian Portuguese discussed in the previous chapters, showing how they are organically articulated.
Portuguese is the second most spoken Romance language in the world, and due to recent interest in comparative syntax, the literature on its syntax has increased exponentially, resulting in exciting discoveries of a range of aspects that have hitherto been overlooked. This book provides a theoretically grounded overview of the major syntactic properties of Portuguese, focusing on the differences between European and Brazilian Portuguese. It shows from a theoretical point of view how different syntactic properties are interconnected by comparing and contrasting the variances between pronominal and agreement systems, null subjects, null complements, and word order. It also highlights how small differences in the specification of syntactic properties may yield quite different dialects. It introduces key theoretical points without technical jargon, making the content accessible to specialist and non-specialists alike. It is essential reading for both academic researchers and students of Portuguese language, comparative syntax, Romance linguistics, and theoretical syntax.
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