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The Roots of Verbal Meaning (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,840
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The Roots of Verbal Meaning (Hardcover)
Series: Oxford Studies in Theoretical Linguistics, 74
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC
BY-NC-ND 4.0 International licence. It is free to read at Oxford
Scholarship Online and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and
selected open access locations. This book explores possible and
impossible word meanings, with a specific focus on the meanings of
verbs. John Beavers and Andrew Koontz-Garboden adopt the now common
view that verb meanings consist at least partly of an event
structure, made up of two elements: an event template describing
the verb's broad temporal and causal contours, which occurs across
lots of verbs and groups them into semantic and grammatical
classes; and an idiosyncratic root describing specific, real world
states and actions that distinguish between verbs with the same
template. While much work has focused on templates, less work has
addressed the truth-conditional contributions of roots, despite the
importance of a theory of root meaning in fully defining the
predictions made by event structural approaches. This book aims to
address this gap by exploring two previously proposed constraints
on root meaning: The Bifurcation Thesis of Roots, whereby roots
never introduce the meanings introduced by templates, and
Manner/Result Complementarity, which specifies that roots can
describe either a manner or a result state but never both at the
same time. Two extended case studies, on change-of-state verbs and
ditransitive verbs of caused possession, show that neither
hypothesis holds, and that ultimately there may be no constraints
on what a root can mean. Nonetheless, the book argues that event
structures still have predictive value: it presents a new theory of
possible root meanings and their interaction with event templates
that produces a new typology of possible verbs, in which systematic
semantic and grammatical properties are determined not just by
templates, but also by roots.
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