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Books > Language & Literature > Language & linguistics > Grammar, syntax, linguistic structure > General
How does our knowledge of the language on the one hand, and of the
context on the other, permit us to understand what we are told, to
resolve ambiguities, to grasp both explicit and implicit content,
to appreciate metaphor and irony? These issues have been studied in
two disciplines: linguistic pragmatics and psycholinguistics, with
only limited interactions between the two. This volume lays down
the foundation for a new field: "Experimental Pragmatics."
Contributions review pioneering work and present novel ways of
articulating theories and experimental methods in the area.
Possession and Ownership brings together linguists and
anthropologists in a series of cross-linguistic explorations of
expressions used to denote possession and ownership, concepts
central to most if not all the varied cultures and ideologies of
humankind. Possessive noun phrases can be broadly divided into
three categories - ownership of property, whole-part relations
(such as body and plant parts), and blood and affinal kinship
relations. As Professor Aikhenvald shows in her extensive opening
essay, the same possessive noun or pronoun phrase is used in
English and in many other Indo-European languages to express
possession of all three kinds - as in "Ann and her husband Henry
live in the castle Henry's father built with his own hands" - but
that this is by no means the case in all languages. In some, for
example, the grammar expresses the inalienability of consanguineal
kinship and sometimes also of sacred or treasured objects.
Furthermore the degree to which possession and ownership are
conceived as the same (when possession is 100% of the law) differs
from one society to another, and this may be reflected in their
linguistic expression. Like others in the series this pioneering
book will be welcomed equally by linguists and anthropologists.
This book explores the interaction of grammatical components in a
wide variety of languages, and presents and exemplifies new
experimental and analytic techniques for studying linguistic
interfaces. Speaking a language requires access to the different
aspects of its grammar -- semantic, syntactic, phonological,
pragmatic, morphological, and phonetic. Knowing how these interact
is crucial to understanding the operations of any specific language
and to the explanation of how language in general operates in the
mind. The new research presented here combines theoretical and
experimental perspectives on one of the most productive fields in
contemporary linguistics.
After the editors' introduction the volume is organized along four
themes: the structural properties of sentences interfacing with
meaning and the lexicon; internal word structure and its effect on
the syntactic and phonological components; the syntax-phonology
interface and its relation to the phonetics-phonology interface;
and the implications of interfaces for language acquisition and
language processing. The book will interest theoretical linguists
and all those in linguistics and cognitive science working on the
mental operations of language.
Features, Categories, and the Syntax of A-Positions investigates
various aspects of the distribution of nominal arguments, and in
particular the cross-linguistic variation that can be found among
the Germanic languages in this domain of the syntax. The empirical
topics that are discussed include variable vs. fixed argument
order, the distribution of subjects with respect to adjuncts,
expletive constructions, and oblique subjecthood. These and many
other phenomena are analyzed within a theoretical framework which
is based on the Minimalist Program. The book argues that the
traditional theoretical devices accounting for the distribution of
arguments in generative syntax (abstract Case, the Extended
Projection Principle) should be eliminated from the grammar and
that their apparent effects can be derived from the feature
specifications of syntactic categories. Furthermore, it is shown
that several aspects of the cross-linguistic variation found in the
syntax of arguments can be related to variation in the domain of
inflectional morphology.
This book provides the first empirical study of the history and
spread of mediopassive constructions. It investigates the
productivity of the pattern, the spread of the construction in
Modern English, and looks into text type-specific preferences for
the construction. On a more abstract level, it combines the
corpus-based description of mediopassive constructions with
cognitive linguistic models, drawing largely on notions such as
'prototype', 'family resemblances', 'patch' and 'construction'. The
theoretical modelling is largely based on data from real texts.
These come from publicly available machine-readable corpora,
text-databases and a single-register 'corpus' (American mail-order
catalogues). The study combines the corpus-based approach with
cognitive theories and is therefore of interest to both empirical
and theoretical linguists.
The format of this book is unusual, especially for a book about
linguistics. The book is meant primarily as a research monograph
aimed at linguists who have some background in formal semantics, e.
g. Montague Grammar. However, I have two other audiences in mind.
Linguists who have little or no experience of formal semantics, but
who have worked through a basic mathematics for linguists course
(e. g. using Wall, 1972, or Partee, 1978), should, perhaps with the
help of a sympathetic Montague gramma rian, be able to discover
enough of how I have adapted some of the basic ideas in formal
semantics to make the developments that I undertake in the rest of
the book accessible. Logicians and computer scientists who know
about model theoretic semantics and formal systems should be able
to glean enough from Chapters I and II about linguistic concerns
and techniques to be able to read the remainder of the book, again
possibly with the help of a sympathetic Montague grammarian.
However, readers should beware. Chapter II is not meant as a
general introduction either to formal semantics or to linguistics
and while much of the presentation there is going over ground that
is already well covered in the literature, the particular
formulation and the emphases are very much oriented to the
developments to be undertaken later in the book."
Most linguistic theories assume that each grammatical relation is
established in a unique structural configuration. Neeleman and
Weerman take issue with this view, arguing for a more flexible
approach on the basis of conceptual considerations and data taken
mostly, but not exclusively, from the Germanic languages. In-depth
analyses of word order phenomena as well as diachronic and
typological generalizations motivate a re-evaluation of the role of
case in the projection of arguments. Case is shown to provide a
syntactic foothold for thematic interpretation, something which is
necessary in a grammar that does not allow fixed theta-positions.
Thus, this study does not only offer a genuine alternative to many
standard assumptions, it also explains why there should be such a
thing as case in natural language.
Researchers in Romance languages will find this book a stimulating and broad-ranging treatment of the development of grammar, demonstrating the relevance of markedness for both linguistic theory and language teaching. A substantial and original account of a unique body of data, across first and second language acquisition, creolization and historical linguistics and across a wide range of languages and contact varieties, demonstrates a new impetus and predictive force for markedness theory.
A revival of interest in morphology has occurred during recent
years. Since 1988, the Yearbook of Morphology book series has
proven to be an eminent platform for the growth of morphological
research, containing articles on topics that are central in the
current theoretical debates. The Yearbook of Morphology 1996
focuses on the relationship between morphology and
psycholinguistics. Basic questions such as the following are
discussed. To what extent does the morphological structure of a
word play a role in its perception and production? Are regular
complex words created anew each time they are used, or are they
stored in the lexicon? The relevant evidence comes from a variety
of European languages. Another important theme in this yearbook is
the degree of autonomy of morphology: in which respect does it
differ from other modules of the grammar? The present yearbook also
contains articles on periphrasis, the nature of inflectional
morphology and syncretism in derivational morphology. Audience:
Theoretical and historical linguists, morphologists, phonologists
and psycholinguists will find this book of interest.
This book contains an original analysis of the existential
there-sentence from a philosophical-linguistic perspective. At its
core is the claim that there-sentences' form is distinct from that
of ordinary subject-predicate sentences, and that this fundamental
difference explains the construction's unusual grammatical and
discourse properties.
Particles are words that do not change their form through
inflection and do not fit easily into the established system of
parts of speech. Examples include the negative particle "not," the
infinitival particle "to" (as in "to go"), and do and let in "do
tell me" and "let's go." Particles investigates the constraints on
the distribution and placement of verbal particles. A proper
understanding of these constraints yields insight into the
structure of various secondary predicative constructions. Starting
out from a detailed analysis of complex particle constructions, den
Dikken brings forth accounts of triadic constructions and Dative
Shift, and the relationship between dative and transitive causative
constructions--all of them built on the basic structural template
proposed from complex particle constructions. Drawing on data from
Norwegian, English, Dutch, German, West Flemish, and other
languages, this book will interest a wide audience of students and
specialists.
A revival of interest in morphology has occurred during recent
years. The Yearbook of Morphology series, published since 1988, has
proven to be an eminent support for this upswing of morphological
research, since it contains articles on topics which are central in
the current theoretical debates which are frequently referred to.
In the Yearbook of Morphology 2002 a number of articles is devoted
to the morphology of a variety of pidgin and creole languages which
appear to have much more morphology than traditionally assumed.
A second topic of this volume is the morphological use of
truncation for the coinage of proper names in Germanic and Romance
languages, in particular endearment forms, with highly interesting
consequences for the theory of phonology-morphology interaction.
Thirdly, this volume contains articles on how affixes are combined
and ordered in complex words, and the complex linguistic principles
behind these orderings.
Virtually all the papers in these volumes originated in
presentations at the Fourth Groniogen Round Table, held in July
1980. That conference, organ ized by the Institute for General
linguistics of Groniogen University was the fourth in an irregular
series of meetings devoted to issues of topical interest to
linguists. Its predecessor, the Third Round Table, was held in June
1976, and dealt with the semantics of natural language. A selection
of the papers was published as Syntax and Semantics 10, Selections
from the Third Groningen Round Table, ed. by F. Heny and H.
Schnelle, Academic Press, 1979. This fourth meeting was more
narrowly focussed. The original intention was to examine the
hypothesis of Akmajian, Steele and Wasow in their paper 'The
Category AUX in Universal Grammar', Linguistic Inquiry 10, 1-64.
Ultimately the topic was broadened considerably to encompass not
only the syntax, semantics and morphology of auxiliaries and
related elements, but to tackle the problem (implicit in the
original work of Akmajian, Steele and Wasow) of justifying the
selection of categories. for the analysis of natural language. In
the summer of 1979, a workshop and short, informal conference were
held at the University of Salzburg, in preparation for the Round
Table. These were organized in conjunction with the Summer
Institute of the linguistiC Society of America. The cooperation of
the LSA and of the University of Salzburg, and in particular of the
Director of that Institute, Professor Gaberen Drachman, is hereby
gratefully acknowledged."
In A Grammar of Murui (Bue), Katarzyna Wojtylak provides the first
complete description of Murui, an endangered Witotoan language,
spoken by the Murui-Muina (Witoto) people from Colombia and Peru.
The grammar is written from a functional and typological
perspective, using natural language data gathered during several
fieldtrips to the Caqueta-Putumayo region between 2013 and 2017.
The many remarkable characteristics of Murui include a complex
system of classifiers, differential subject and object marking,
person-marking verb morphology, evidential and epistemic marking,
head-tail linkage, and a system of numerals, including the
fraternal (brother-based) forms for 'three' and 'four'. The grammar
represents an important contribution to the study of Witotoan
languages, linguistic typology of Northwest Amazonia, and language
contact in the area.
Information Structure and Syntactic Change in the History of
English is the first book to apply information structure as it
relates to language change to a corpus-based analysis of a wide
range of features in the evolution of English syntax and grammars
of prose in long diachrony. Its unifying topic is the role of
information structure, broadly conceived, as it interacts with the
other levels of linguistic description, syntax, morphology,
prosody, semantics and pragmatics. The volume comprises twelve
chapters by leading scholars who take a variety of theoretical and
methodological approaches. Their work affirms, among other things,
that motivations for selecting a particular syntactic option vary
from information structure in the strict sense to discourse
organization, or a particular style or register, and can also be
associated with external forces such as the development of a
literary culture.
In recent years, the Cognitive Grammar account of language and mind
has become an influential framework for the study of textual
meaning and interpretation. This book is the first to bring
together applications of Cognitive Grammar for a range of stylistic
purposes, including the analysis of both literary and non-literary
discourse. Demonstrating the diverse range of uses for Cognitive
Grammar, chapters apply this framework to diverse text-types
including poetry, narrative fiction, comics, press reports,
political discourse and music, as well as exploring its potential
for the teaching of language and literature in a range of contexts.
Combining cutting-edge research in cognitive, critical and
pedagogical stylistics, New Directions in Cognitive Grammar and
Style showcases the latest developments in this field and offers
new insights into our experiences of literary and non-literary
texts by drawing on current understandings of language and
cognition.
This work presents a unified theory of aspect within Universal
Grammar. It provides an unusual combination of syntactic, semantic,
and pragmatic approaches to a single domain, and gives detailed
linguistic analyses of five languages with very different aspectual
systems: English, French, Mandarin Chinese, Navajo and Russian.
This second edition has been completely revised to include further
development of the two-component theory, including new treatments
of boundedness, dynamism and a general account of aspectual shifts.
It includes syntactic and semantic tests.
Volume 1 of A Grammar and Dictionary of Indus Kohistani contains
around 8.000 lemmata, many of which are supplemented with parallels
from adjacent dialects, from other Dardic, from Nuristani,
Indo-Aryan, Iranian, Dravidian and Munda languages, and from
Burushaski. The lemmata have been, wherever possible, provided with
information about their origin, and they are connected by numerous
cross-references. Since Indus Kohistani is a pitch accent language
with complicated rules governing the behaviour of the two pitch
accents in compounding, derivation, and inflexion, the lemmata are
not only marked with their appropriate pitch accents, but the
behaviour of the accents (change of value, shift) is illustrated
with a large number of inflected forms and cross-references. And
since Indus Kohistani has a rich (and frequently irregular) inner
and outer conjugation, most verbs are provided with many finite and
participle forms. In addition, the dictionary contains two indexes
(English - Indus Kohistani and Old Indo-Aryan - Indus Kohistani),
and lists with place and clan names, names of the months, etc.
"Arguing that a corpus-based approach is indispensable for the
study of changes of complementation in British and American
English, the author examines several central patterns of sentential
complementation in a number of electronic corpora to shed light on
the emergence and spread of innovative constructions in relatively
recent English"--
Witty, entertaining, and informative, this book on so-called 'false
friends' will be of immediate use to anyone using the French
language and needing to understand French society and culture. The
individual entries have been carefully designed to carry the basic
linguistic information required and then develop into a wider
consideration of the social and cultural context within which the
specific words and phrases are used in current French. As this
title is supposed to be used in conjunction with and not instead of
a dictionary, it also offers a brief list of recommended reading
ranging from standard dictionaries to introductory works on French
society and institutions.
This volume presents the proceedIngs of the Twelfth Annual LIn
guistics Symposium of the UniversIty of WisconsIn-Milwaukee held
March 11-12, 1983 on the campus of UWM. It includes all papers that
were given at the conference with the exception of Genevieve Escure
and Glenn Gilbert's joint paper "Syntactic marking/unmarking
phenomena in the creole continuum of Belize" which was not
submitted for publication by the authors. Many of the papers appear
in this volume in a revised form that is somewhat different from
the oral version. We would like to thank the various departments
and other units at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee that
sponsored the mark- ness symposium. These are: the Department of
Linguistics, the English as a Second Language Intensive Program,
the College of Let ters and Science, the Division of Urban
Outreach, the Center for Latin America and the Spanish Speaking
Outreach Institute. Finally, we wish to thank Lisa Carrara for
doing a careful joh on the preparation of the index, and J. L.
Russell, for his patience and perseverance in typing a difficult
manuscript."
It's or Its? Full stop inside or outside the inverted commas?
What's the difference between a semi-colon and a colon? Cooperate
or co-operate? Punctuation For Now describes in a witty but
authoritative way how our present system of punctuation has grown
out of the history of our language. It also indicates the
conventions that govern the best punctuation in the English of
today. The rules are set out clearly, and reinforced by abundant
examples from the work of such authors as Kingsley Amis and Evelyn
Waugh. Anyone with an examination to pass, or with a child who is
learning to use English, or who writes it for a living, will find
Punctuation For Now an invaluable guide and friend.
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