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The Languages and Linguistics of Australia: A Comprehensive Guide
is part of the multi-volume reference work on the languages and
linguistics of the continents of the world. The volume provides a
thorough overview of Australian languages, including their
linguistic structures, their genetic relationships, and issues of
language maintenance and revitalisation. Australian English,
Aboriginal English and other contact varieties are also discussed.
A clear introduction to lexical-functional grammar (LFG), this
outstanding textbook sets out a formal approach to the study of
language using a step-by-step approach and rich language data. Data
from English and a range of other languages is used to illustrate
the main concepts, allowing those students not accustomed to
working with cross-linguistic data to familiarize themselves with
the theory, while also enabling those interested in how the theory
can account for more challenging data sets to extend their
learning. Exercises ranging from simple technical questions to
analyses of a data set, as well as a further resources section with
a literature review complete each chapter. The book aims to equip
readers with the skills to analyze new data sets and to begin to
engage with the primary LFG literature.
A clear introduction to lexical-functional grammar (LFG), this
outstanding textbook sets out a formal approach to the study of
language using a step-by-step approach and rich language data. Data
from English and a range of other languages is used to illustrate
the main concepts, allowing those students not accustomed to
working with cross-linguistic data to familiarize themselves with
the theory, while also enabling those interested in how the theory
can account for more challenging data sets to extend their
learning. Exercises ranging from simple technical questions to
analyses of a data set, as well as a further resources section with
a literature review complete each chapter. The book aims to equip
readers with the skills to analyze new data sets and to begin to
engage with the primary LFG literature.
Australian Aboriginal languages have many interesting grammatical
characteristics that challenge some of the central assumptions of
current linguistic theory. These languages exhibit many unusual
morphosyntactic characteristics that have not yet been adequately
incorporated into current linguistic theory. This volume focuses on
the complex properties of case morphology in these
nonconfigurational languages, including extensive case stacking and
the use of case to mark tense/aspect/mood. While problematic for
many syntactic approaches, these case properties are given a
natural and unified account in the lexicalist model of constructive
case developed in this book, which allows case morphology to
construct the larger syntactic context independently of phrase
structure.
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