Islands
Modern theories suggest certain phrases are "phases" that become invisible to the rest of the sentence once completed. 2. The Information Structure View
Many generative grammarians argue that islands are a result of the of human language.
Once a subject moves to its final position, its internal structure is "frozen" and cannot be accessed. Islands
Some researchers suggest the problem isn't grammar, but .
A occurs when the grammatical subject of a sentence acts as one of these barriers. In English, you can usually extract a word from the object of a sentence, but doing the same to the subject results in an ill-formed "island violation". Modern theories suggest certain phrases are "phases" that
Subjects usually provide "old" information (the background). Trying to pull a "new" focus out of a backgrounded subject creates a mental clash.
Extracting from a subject might simply be too mentally taxing for the brain to process in real-time. Exceptions and "Parasitic" Gaps Once a subject moves to its final position,
The second gap is inside an "island," but the first "licit" gap makes the whole sentence feel okay to a native speaker.

