Characteristics of Phrase Clause and Sentence
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Introduction, Page 1
Introduction, page 1 Introduction This book is concerned with how structure, meaning and communicative function interact in human languages. Language is a system of communicative social action in which grammatical structures are employed to express meaning in context. While all languages can achieve the same basic communicative ends, different languages use different linguistic means to achieve them, and an important aspect of these differences concerns the divergent ways syntax, semantics and pragmatics interact across languages. For example, the noun phrase referring to the entity being talked about (the ‘topic’) may be signalled by its position in the clause, by its grammatical function, by its morphological case, or by a particle in different languages, and moreover in some languages this marking may have grammatical consequences and in other languages it may not. The framework in which this investigation is to be carried out is Role and Reference Grammar [RRG].1 RRG grew out of an attempt to answer two basic questions, which were originally posed during the mid-1970’s: (i) what would linguistic theory look like if it were based on the analysis of Lakhota, Tagalog and Dyirbal, rather than on the analysis of English?, and (ii) how can the interaction of syntax, semantics and pragmatics in different grammatical systems best be captured and explained? Accordingly, RRG has developed descriptive tools and theoretical principles which are designed to expose this interaction and offer explanations for it. It posits three main representations: (1) a representation of the syntactic structure of sentences, which corresponds to the actual structural form of utterances, (2) a semantic representation representing important facets of the meaning of linguistic expressions, and (3) a representation of the information (focus) structure of the utterance, which is related to its communicative function. -
Introduction: Complex Adpositions and Complex Nominal Relators Benjamin Fagard, José Pinto De Lima, Elena Smirnova, Dejan Stosic
Introduction: Complex Adpositions and Complex Nominal Relators Benjamin Fagard, José Pinto de Lima, Elena Smirnova, Dejan Stosic To cite this version: Benjamin Fagard, José Pinto de Lima, Elena Smirnova, Dejan Stosic. Introduction: Complex Adpo- sitions and Complex Nominal Relators. Benjamin Fagard, José Pinto de Lima, Dejan Stosic, Elena Smirnova. Complex Adpositions in European Languages : A Micro-Typological Approach to Com- plex Nominal Relators, 65, De Gruyter Mouton, pp.1-30, 2020, Empirical Approaches to Language Typology, 978-3-11-068664-7. 10.1515/9783110686647-001. halshs-03087872 HAL Id: halshs-03087872 https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-03087872 Submitted on 24 Dec 2020 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. Public Domain Benjamin Fagard, José Pinto de Lima, Elena Smirnova & Dejan Stosic Introduction: Complex Adpositions and Complex Nominal Relators Benjamin Fagard CNRS, ENS & Paris Sorbonne Nouvelle; PSL Lattice laboratory, Ecole Normale Supérieure, 1 rue Maurice Arnoux, 92120 Montrouge, France [email protected] -
SPELLING out P a UNIFIED SYNTAX of AFRIKAANS ADPOSITIONS and V-PARTICLES by Erin Pretorius Dissertation Presented for the Degree
SPELLING OUT P A UNIFIED SYNTAX OF AFRIKAANS ADPOSITIONS AND V-PARTICLES by Erin Pretorius Dissertation presented for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences at Stellenbosch University Supervisors Prof Theresa Biberauer (Stellenbosch University) Prof Norbert Corver (University of Utrecht) Co-supervisors Dr Johan Oosthuizen (Stellenbosch University) Dr Marjo van Koppen (University of Utrecht) December 2017 This dissertation was completed as part of a Joint Doctorate with the University of Utrecht. Stellenbosch University https://scholar.sun.ac.za DECLARATION By submitting this dissertation electronically, I declare that the entirety of the work contained therein is my own, original work, that I am the owner of the copyright thereof (unless to the extent explicitly otherwise stated) and that I have not previously in its entirety or in part submitted it for obtaining any qualification. December 2017 Date The financial assistance of the South African National Research Foundation (NRF) towards this research is hereby acknowledged. Opinions expressed and conclusions arrived at, are those of the author and are not necessarily to be attributed to the NRF. The author also wishes to acknowledge the financial assistance provided by EUROSA of the European Union, and the Foundation Study Fund for South African Students of Zuid-Afrikahuis. Copyright © 2017 Stellenbosch University Stellenbosch University https://scholar.sun.ac.za For Helgard, my best friend and unconquerable companion – all my favourite spaces have you in them; thanks for sharing them with me For Hester, who made it possible for me to do what I love For Theresa, who always takes the stairs Stellenbosch University https://scholar.sun.ac.za ABSTRACT Elements of language that are typically considered to have P (i.e. -
Adpositional Case
Adpositional Case S.A.M . Lestrade Adpositional Case Sander Lestrade PIONIER Project Case Cross-Linguistically Department of Linguistics Radboud University Nijmegen P.O. Box 9103 6500 HD Nijmegen The Netherlands www.ru.nl/pionier S.Lestrade@ let.ru.nl Adpositional Case M A Thesis Linguistics Department Radboud University Nijmegen May 2006 Sander Lestrade 0100854 First supervisor: Dr. Helen de Hoop Second supervisors: Dr. Ad Foolen and Dr. Joost Zwarts Acknowledgments I would like to thank Lotte Hogeweg and the members of the PIONIER project Case Cross-Linguistically for the nice cooperation and for providing a very stimulating working environment during the past year. Many thanks go to Geertje van Bergen for fruitful discussion and support during the process of writing. I would like to thank Ad Foolen and Joost Zwarts for their willingness to be my second supervisors and their useful comments on an earlier version; special thanks to Joost Zwarts for very useful and crucial discussion. Also, I gratefully acknowledge the Netherlands Organisation of Scientific Research (NWO) for financial support, grant 220-70-003, principal investigator Helen de Hoop (PIONIER-project “Case cross-linguistically”). Most of all, I would like to thank Helen de Hoop for her fantastic supervising without which I probably would not even have started, but certainly not have finished my thesis already. Moreover, I would like to thank her for the great opportunities she offered me to develop my skills in Linguistics. v Contents Acknowledgments v Contents vii Abbreviations -
Case Alternations on Verb-Phrase Internal Arguments No, Yongkyoon, Ph.D
Order Number 9211104 Case alternations on verb-phrase internal arguments No, Yongkyoon, Ph.D. The Ohio State University, 1991 Copyright ©1901 by No, Yongkyoon. All rights reserved. UMI 300N. ZeebRd. Ann Axbor, MI 48106 CASE ALTERNATIONS ON VERB-PHRASE INTERNAL ARGUMENTS DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Yongkyoon No, B.A., M.A. afc * $ * * The Ohio State University 1991 Dissertation Committee: Approved by Arnold M. Zwicky David R. Dowty Robert D. Levine Advisor Carl J. Pollard Department of Linguistics Copyright © 1991 by Yongkyoon No To My Parents ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I would like to thank Arnold Zwicky for perhaps more than half of my linguisthood. He guided me with patience and tender loving care to what I now believe is a better understanding of language. Especially unforgetful is his attention to details of all aspects of language which is accompanied by a restrictive framework. David Dowty has broadened my vision about semantic problems and taught me how to be humble when I don’t have a better analysis. Robert Levine has been most generous with his time. He helped me improve this dissertation in terms of the exposition of data and argumentation, the organization, and the accuracy of generalizations. The conferences with him in Summer 1991 were invaluable. Carl Pollard provided me with relevant comments of technical nature throughout the last stage of this writing. His comments enabled me to think through evident alternative analyses, when I was inclined to be egotistical. I am grateful to them all. -
THE NATURE of CHINESE ADPOSITIONS and THEIR CONSTITUENT Orderl
THE NATURE OF CHINESE ADPOSITIONS AND THEIR CONSTITUENT ORDERl JUNLIN PAN University of Arizona This paper investigates Chinese adpositions with respect to the typological adposition parameter. It is claimed that Chinese co-verbs are prepositions, and Chinese short form locative words are postpositions. This claim is actually confirming a predicative role for Chinese Type 1 co-verbs. With the presence of both prepositions and postpositions in Chinese, a third type of adposition, i.e. circumposition, is also said to exist. It is proposed that the last type be typologized on the adposition parameter as prepositional, where the preposition and the NP+ postposition are immediate constituents of the adpositional phrase. 1. Introduction Within the framework of word order typology, the adposition parameter distinguishes between languages according to the position of the adposition.within its adpositional phrase: head final vs. head initial. Chinese has a much more complicated system of adpositions than most languages. It cannot be neatly put on either end of the binary parameter. Whereas some (e.g. Ernst, 1988) have argued that Chinese is a postpositional language, others (e.g. Li & Thompson, 1974) have argued that Chinese is a prepositional language, and still others (e.g. Ross, 1984) have proposed a two-way classification for Chinese major grammatical categories (i.e. distinction between N and V) and claimed that Chinese does not have adpositions at all. The issues seem to concern (1) whether Chinese does or does not have adpositions; and (2) how to identify or categorize this type of word in Chinese. In addition, if existence of both forms of adpositions (preposed and postposed) can be claimed for the Chinese language, a kind of 'bipositioned' adpositions are observed which take position on both sides of the objective noun in the phrase.2 If this is the case, further observation and analysis will be needed in order to acknowledge the status of this type of adposition in the language, as well as locate it on the parameter. -
Phrase Structure Directionality: Having a Few Choices
PHRASE STRUCTURE DIRECTIONALITY: HAVING A FEW CHOICES by ALEXANDRA ZEPTER A Dissertation submitted to the Graduate School - New Brunswick Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Graduate Program in Linguistics written under the direction of Professor Mark Baker and approved by Mark Baker Jane Grimshaw Ken Safir Peter Sells New Brunswick, New Jersey October, 2003 ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION Phrase Structure Directionality: Having a few Choices by ALEXANDRA ZEPTER Dissertation Director: Professor Mark Baker The thesis claims that the linear organization of specifier, head and complement in a phrase and throughout a syntactic tree is determined by a conflict between general violable constraints on X-bar-structure. The adopted framework is Optimality Theory (cf. Prince & Smolensky 1993; in syntax, cf. Grimshaw 1997). The proposed constraint system explains why phrase structure directionality is mostly uniform and why only some non-uniform cases exist, while other logically possible kinds of mixed directionality are unattested. Central to the dissertation is the idea that head-initial oriented languages have a greater structural conflict to resolve inside their lexical projections than head-final languages: The combination of a general preference for [head - complement]-order and for a left-peripheral specifier bars the lexical head from surfacing at an edge of the phrase. The combination of a general preference for [complement - head]-order and for a left-peripheral specifier still allows alignment at one edge. This greater conflict can be resolved in different ways, which leads to slightly more variation among head-initial oriented languages: Not only do we find uniform SVO-languages, but we also find VOS-languages, VSO-languages and head-initial oriented languages with a head-final verb phrase. -
Against a Parameter-Setting Approach to Typological Variation
John Benjamins Publishing Company This is a contribution from Linguistic Variation Yearbook 4 © 2004. John Benjamins Publishing Company This electronic file may not be altered in any way. The author(s) of this article is/are permitted to use this PDF file to generate printed copies to be used by way of offprints, for their personal use only. Permission is granted by the publishers to post this file on a closed server which is accessible to members (students and staff) only of the author’s/s’ institute. For any other use of this material prior written permission should be obtained from the publishers or through the Copyright Clearance Center (for USA: www.copyright.com). Please contact [email protected] or consult our website: www.benjamins.com Tables of Contents, abstracts and guidelines are available at www.benjamins.com Against a parameter-setting approach to typological variation Frederick J. Newmeyer University of Washington The dominant position among generative grammarians with respect to typological variation is that it should be captured by parameters, which are either directly tied to principles of Universal Grammar (UG) or to functional projections provided by UG. Parameter-setting approaches, however, have failed to live up to their promise. They should be replaced by a model in which language-particular rules take over the work of parameter settings and in which most typological variation follows from independently-needed principles of performance. In such a model, UG specifies the class of possible languages, but not the set of probable languages. Keywords: parameter, processing, rule, typology, Universal Grammar . The parametric approach to language variation My goal in this paper to contrast two approaches to typological variation in grammar within the general envelope of formal theory. -
The Branching Direction Theory of Word Order Correlations Revisited1
To appear in Sergio Scalise, Elisabetta Magni, Antonietta Bisetto (eds.), Universals of Language Today, Berlin: Springer. The Branching Direction Theory of Word Order Correlations Revisited1 Matthew S. Dryer University at Buffalo In Dryer (1992a), I presented evidence from a sample of 625 languages on which pairs of elements correlate with the order of object and verb, and which do not (Greenberg 1963). I argued that the word order correlations reflect a tendency for languages to be consistently left- branching or consistently right-branching, what I referred to as the Branching Direction Theory (the BDT), and proposed that this tendency reflects processing difficulties associated with mixing left- and right-branching. The predictions of the BDT depend heavily, however, on one’s assumptions about constituent structure. A number of the correlations require assuming fairly hierarchical constituent structures, and are not predicted by the BDT if one assumes flatter constituent structures. In this paper, I discuss a number of these correlations, arguing that some of them can be explained by a combination of processing considerations and other principles, while a few remain unexplained under assumptions of flat constituent structures. 1. What correlates with the order of object and verb? While my current database is considerably larger than it was at the time I wrote Dryer (1992a), now containing at least partial data for over 1500 languages, the additional languages do not change the evidence presented in Dryer (1992) as to which pairs of elements correlate with the order of object and verb. In this section, I summarize the conclusions regarding this. In order to discuss the correlations, it is useful to have a way of referring to the various pairs of elements that correlate with the order of object and verb and the members of each pair. -
The Argument Structure of Deverbal Nouns in Brazilian Portuguese
web papers in functional grammar wpfg 81. March 2007 The argument structure of deverbal nouns in Brazilian Portuguese Roberto Gomes CAMACHO Universidade Estadual Paulista, São José do Rio Preto, Brazil The argument structure of deverbal nouns in Brazilian Portuguese 1. Introduction1 A considerable amount of work has been done on the argument structure of nominalizations in general and of deverbal nouns in particular, much of it within the functionalist perspective. In general, these studies are more concerned with syntax and semantics than with pragmatics, which is considered the most encompassing domain of explanation in FG (Dik 1997a). Moreover, little effort has been devoted to the analysis of real conversational data, which are highly relevant for a functionalist approach. My aim in this paper is to interpret the argument structure of deverbal nouns giving priority to the pragmatic domain on the basis of a corpus of spoken Portuguese. As a derived type of term, deverbal nouns are generally assumed to keep the same argument structure as the input verb. Thus, deverbal nouns can be mono-, bi- or trivalent, depending on the valency of the input verb; similarly, deadjectival nouns can be mono- or bivalent, depending on the valency of the original lexical item. This is the position taken in Dik’s (1985, 1997a) original proposal, according to which the arguments of the base verb or adjective are also arguments of the derived nouns. However, this interpretation of valency by natural inheritance is not uncontroversial because it is only very rarely that in constructions headed by deverbal nouns all the 2 arguments of its underlying valency are expressed, as illustrated in (1a). -
Ambipositions: a Symptom of Disharmony? an Investigation of Ambipositions and Disharmony in Western Uralic Languages
cambridge occasional papers in linguistics COP i L Volume 10, Article 10: 256–266, 2017 j ISSN 2050-5949 Ambipositions: A symptom of disharmony? An investigation of ambipositions and disharmony in Western Uralic languages Hanna Danbolt Ajer University of Cambridge 1 Introduction This paper seeks to elucidate the relation between ambipositions and disharmony, and investigate whether the presence of a substantial number of ambipositions implies that the language system is disharmonic overall. We start with a general discussion of disharmony, before moving on to discussing ambipositions. Thereafter, we will take a closer look at Finnish, Estonian and North Sami, which all contain an unusually high number of ambipositions. 2 Disharmony The notion of harmony relates to word order, specically the ordering of heads and dependents (Biberauer & Sheehan 2013:7). Dierent structures can be called harmonic if the order of head and dependent is constant across them (Biberauer & Sheehan 2013:6). Although languages display a tendency for harmony, it is common for them to include some disharmonic structures. The study of harmony has sought to explain not only why harmonic structures are preferred, but also why disharmonic structures occur in spite of this preference. Language change is often taken to be the cause of disharmony. This is because the order of head and dependent might change earlier in some structures than others when a language is undergoing a gradual word order shift (Croft 2002:240). The fact that harmonic systems change, indicates that there must be other factors which are given more weight than harmony. One such consideration might be to adapt to the surrounding language environment in a language contact situation. -
Canonical and Non-Canonical Patterns in the Adpositional Phrase of Western Uralic: Constraints of Borrowing
SUSA/JSFOu 97, 2019 Riho Grünthal (Helsinki) Canonical and non-canonical patterns in the adpositional phrase of Western Uralic: Constraints of borrowing Notions about adpositions and adpositional phrases (AdpP) reflect the ambiguous nature of this particular domain. While postpositions and prepositions are often dealt with as lexical categories, their syntactic context determines the grammatical relations of individual postpositions. In the diachronic development of individual adpositions, the phrasal unit of AdpP plays a crucial role either enhancing or diminishing the possibility of adopting new adpositions. In Uralic both the head and complement may be inflected, which increases the divergence of the adpositional system in comparison with most neighboring contact languages. This is illustratively seen in the bulk of adpositions in Finnic, Saamic and Mordvinic, which only exceptionally include borrowed lexemes. The focus of this article is bifold. Firstly, it briefly outlines the main structural types of AdpP, particularly in Western Uralic. Secondly, it discusses why loanwords only seldom occur in the adpositional system of languages that are strongly influenced by language contact and widespread bilingualism, such as contemporary Veps and Erzya. 1. Introduction Ample morphosyntactic variation is characteristic of the adpositional phrase (AdpP) in the Uralic (U) languages. This divergence is not limited merely to word order alternations, but also includes the inflection of the head and the complement of the AdpP and variations in the case government of adpositions, as well. Constituent order may alternate in Saamic and Finnic, the two northwestern branches of Uralic, which increases the diversity between individual AdpPs also in comparison with neighboring Indo-European contact languages.