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This study investigates the types of movement and movement-like
relations that link positions in syntactic structure. David Pesetsky
argues that there are three such relations. Besides overt phasal
movement, there are two distinct types of movement without
phonological effect: covert phrasal movement and feature
movement. Focusing on wh-questions, he shows how his
classification of movement-like relations allows us to understand the
story behind wh-questions in which an otherwise inviolable
property of movement--"Attract Closest"--appears to be violated. By
demonstrating that more movement takes place in such configurations
than previously suspected, he shows that Attract Closest is actually
not violated at all in these cases. This conclusion draws on recent
research in both syntax and semantics, and depends crucially on
Pesetsky's expanded repertoire of movement-like relations.
Linguistic Inquiry Monograph No. 37
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