Semantic syntax /
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
---|---|
Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Leiden ; Boston :
Brill,
[2017]
|
Edición: | Second revised edition. |
Colección: | Empirical approaches to linguistic theory ;
11. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Contents
- Editorâ#x80;#x99;s Foreword
- Preface to the First Edition
- Preface to the Second Edition
- Chapter 1 Introduction
- 1.1 Some Historical and Methodological Backgrounds
- 1.1.1 The Birth of Generative Grammar and its Offshoot Semantic Syntax
- 1.1.2 The Birth of Transformational Generative Grammar
- 1.1.3 The Birth of the Transformational Cycle
- 1.1.4 The Birth of Generative Semantics
- 1.1.5 Autonomous Syntax and X-bar Theory
- 1.1.6 The Demise of Generative Semantics?
- 1.1.7 Methodological Differences with Post-1970 Chomsky
- 1.2 Surface Semantics and Compositionality1.2.1 The Notion of Compositionality
- 1.2.2 No Surface Semantics
- 1.2.3 The Overall Architecture of the Theory
- 1.3 Some General Properties of the Rule System
- 1.3.1 The Architecture of G
- 1.3.2 The General Format: VSO or SOV
- 1.3.3 Thematic Functions versus Argument Functions
- 1.4 SAs as a Way of Representing Sentence Meaning
- 1.4.1 The Overall Structure of SAs for European Languages
- 1.4.2 Predicate Argument Structure: The 19th-Century Debate
- 1.4.3 The General Nature of Predicate Argument Structure
- 1.4.4 The Nonuniversality of SAs and Universal Meaning1.4.5 Alternative Ways of Representing Sentence Meaning?
- 1.5 Prelexical Syntax and Other Aspects of Lexical Meaning
- Chapter 2 Some Formal Properties of Grammars, Trees and Rules
- 2.1 Introductory
- 2.2 Nodes, Constituents, Expansions and Areas
- 2.3 Downgrading of S-nodes
- 2.4 Argument Functions
- 2.5 Elementary Operations
- 2.6 Some Definitions
- 2.7 Routines
- 2.7.1 Procedurally Induced Routines
- 2.7.2 Structurally Induced Routines
- 2.7.3 Category-induced Routines
- 2.7.4 Cyclic Lexically Induced Routines2.8 Directionality and Spines
- 2.9 The Auxiliary System and the Complementation System
- 2.10 Aux
- 2.11 The Double (treble) Tense Analysis
- 2.12 The Complementation System
- Chapter 3 The English Auxiliary and Complementation System
- 3.1 Some Basic Machinery
- 3.1.1 The Main Formation Rules
- 3.1.2 Some Lexicon
- 3.1.3 Cyclic Rules
- 3.1.4 Corollaries
- 3.1.5 Some Postcyclic Rules (to be applied in the order given)
- 3.1.6 How to Use the Machinery
- 3.2 Further Preliminary Remarks
- 3.2.1 Question Formation and Fronting in English3.3 The Generation of a Few Simple English Sentences
- 3.4 Negation, the Modals and emph
- 3.5 Adverbs, Prepositions, and Prepositional Objects
- 3.6 Internal and External Datives
- 3.7 Passives, Progressives and other be-sentences
- 3.7.1 Passives
- 3.7.2 Progressives and the Deletion of Being
- 3.7.3 Other be-sentences: Ã#x98;-be Deletion
- 3.8 Some Aspects of Complementation
- 3.8.1 NP-over-S and Bare S
- 3.8.2 Helping Jim
- 3.8.3 Eager and Easy to Please