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This volume offers a selection of interface studies in generative
linguistics, a valuable "one-stop shopping" opportunity for readers
interested in the ways in which the various modules of linguistic
analysis intersect and interact. The boundaries between the lexicon
and morphophonology, between morphology and syntax, between
morphosyntax and meaning, and between morphosyntax and phonology
are all being crossed in this volume. Though its focus is on
theoretical approaches, experimental studies are also included. The
empirical focus of many of the contributions is on Hungarian, and
several chapters respond to work published by Istvan Kenesei, to
whom the volume is dedicated.
The tenth EFNIL conference investigated the different ways in which
people in Europe access lexical information - both in their own
language and in other languages - and how governments, language
institutions, publishers, and others go about the business of
compiling and disseminating this lexical information. In this
volume, general reflections by several experts on the history, the
present state and new developments of lexicography in Europe are
presented, followed by reports on special lexicographic projects in
several European countries. The Budapest Resolution of EFNIL on the
Lexical Challenges in Multilingual Europe offered in the official
languages of most of the member states of the European Union and
other European countries concludes the book.
The development of smaller and more powerful computers and the
introduction of new communication channels by the interlinking of
computers, by the Internet and the World Wide Web, have caused
great changes for linguistics. They affect the methods in the
various disciplines of pure linguistics as well as the tools and
ways of applied linguistics such as translation and interpretation,
language teaching, learning, and testing. This volume presents
general reflections and overview articles on these new developments
by noted experts followed by reports on the concrete uses of
information technologies for linguistic purposes in different
European countries and at the European Parliament. A discussion of
another important linguistic issue is added: the various uses of
the highly symbolic term national language.
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