Cargando…

Lexicon and grammar : the English syntacticon /

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Emonds, Joseph E.
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Berlin ; New York : Mouton de Gruyter, 2000.
Colección:Studies in generative grammar ; 50.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgments
  • Authorâ€?s academic biography
  • Chapter 1. Categories and feature inventories of Universal Grammar
  • 1.1 A theory and practice of well-formed lexical entries
  • 1.2 Types of syntactic categories and features
  • 1.3 A theory of phrase structure as Extended Projections
  • 1.4 The interplay among derivations, the Lexicon, and Economy Principles
  • 1.5 An excursus into IP reference and economy at the LF Interface
  • Chapter 2. Subcategorization: Syntax as the material basis of semantics
  • 2.1 Advantages of classical subcategorization
  • 2.2 Extending and restricting subcategorization to syntactic features2.3 Syntactic vs. semantic selection: sisterhood is powerful
  • 2.4 Determining Theta Roles by interpretive principles
  • 2.5 Indeterminacy of object roles: the LOCATION feature on V
  • 2.6 Indeterminacy of subject roles: variation in principal role
  • 2.7 A Gedanken Experiment for learning lexical entries
  • Chapter 3. Subcategorization inside words: Morphology as grammatical compounding
  • 3.1 Marked and unmarked headedness: English vs. Japanese
  • 3.2 The independence of head directionality and domain size: French word order3.3 Combining word-internal and phrasal trees
  • 3.4 Conflating syntactic and morphological subcategorization
  • 3.5 Where itâ€?s at: Morphology as a special case of compounding
  • 3.6 Relating morphological typology to free form properties
  • 3.7 Dictionary and Syntacticon: a new slant on lexical research
  • Chapter 4. Multi-level lexical insertion: Explaining Inflection and Derivation
  • 4.1 The bifurcated lexical model: Dictionary and Syntacticon
  • 4.2 Levels of lexical insertion
  • 4.3 Defining and dividing morphology4.4 Inflectional morphology as late insertion
  • 4.5 Alternative Realization on free morphemes
  • 4.6 Derivational morphology: the arguments of lexically derived forms
  • 4.7 English nominalizations: confirming the Syntacticon model
  • 4.8 Expanded list of differences between the Dictionary and the Syntacticon
  • Chapter 5. Passive syntactic structures
  • 5.1 The common syntax of Verbal and Adjectival passives
  • 5.2 Differences between Verbal and Adjectival passives
  • 5.3 Two insertion levels in syntax: two types of passive Adjectives5.4 The Verbal (inflectional) passive
  • 5.5 Cross-linguistic variation in impersonal passives
  • 5.6 The strange Case of perfect participles
  • Chapter 6. The genesis of flat structures: Linking verbs, “lightâ€? verbs and “restructuringâ€?
  • 6.1 Surprising consequences of higher empty heads
  • 6.2 Flatter lexical projections for predicate adjectives and participles
  • 6.3 Flatter lexical projections induced by “lightâ€? verbs
  • 6.4 Theoretical limits on possible flat structures