This book argues that languages are composed of sets of 'signs',
rather than 'strings'. This notion, first posited by de Saussure in
the early 20th century, has for decades been neglected by
linguists, particularly following Chomsky's heavy critiques of the
1950s. Yet since the emergence of formal semantics in the 1970s,
the issue of compositionality has gained traction in the
theoretical debate, becoming a selling point for linguistic
theories.
Yet the concept of 'compositionality' itself remains
ill-defined, an issue this book addresses. Positioning
compositionality as a cornerstone in linguistic theory, it argues
that, contrary to widely held beliefs, there exist
non-compositional languages, which shows that the concept of
compositionality has empirical content. The author asserts that the
existence of syntactic structure can flow from the fact that a
compositional grammar cannot be delivered without prior agreement
on the syntactic structure of the constituents.
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