Multiple wh fronting
In some languages, all wh-elements in a multiple question must be fronted.
Example
The following example is from Bulgarian:
(i) Koj kogo kakvo e pital? who whom what asked-3SG 'Who asked whom what?'
Rudin (1988) has noted that in multiple wh-fronting languages can be divided into two classes. In languages like Bulgarian, the wh-elements act like a cluster, while in languages like Czech and Polish, there seems to be a break after the first wh-element: adverbs and clitics can appear between the first wh-element and the others.
Links
Utrecht Lexicon of Linguistics
References
- Richards, N. 1997. What moves where when in which language?, PhD diss, MIT.
- Rudin, C. 1988. On Multiple Questions and Multiple Wh Fronting, Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 6, 445-501