Descriptive grammarians and typologists often encounter unusual
constructions or unfamiliar variants of otherwise familiar
construction types. Many of these phenomena are puzzling from the
perspective of linguistic theories: they neither predict these
"anomalies" nor, arguably, provide the tools to describe them
insightfully. This book analyzes an unusual type of relative clause
found in many related and unrelated languages of Eurasia. While
providing a detailed case study of Tundra Nenets, it broadens this
inquiry into a detailed typological exploration of this relative
clause type. The authors argue that an understanding of this
construction requires exploring the (type of) grammar system in
which it occurs in order to identify the (set of) independent
constructions that motivate its existence. The resulting insights
into grammar organization illustrate the usefulness of a
construction-theoretic syntax and morphology informed by a
developmental systems perspective for the understanding of complex
grammatical phenomena.
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