Theoretical linguistics and grammatical description : papers in honour of Hans-Heinrich Lieb on the occasion of his 60th birthday /
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam ; Philadelphia :
John Benjamins Publishing Company,
1996.
|
Colección: | Amsterdam studies in the theory and history of linguistic science. Current issues in linguistic theory ;
v. 138. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- THEORETICAL LINGUISTICS AND GRAMMATICAL DESCRIPTION
- Editorial page
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Editor's Preface
- Table of contents
- Biographical Sketch of Hans-Heinrich Lieb
- Hans-Heinrich Lieb: List of Publications 1964-1995
- A Formal Approach to a General Theory of Language
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Primitive and some defined terms
- Language
- Lect
- Linguators
- Texts
- Lingual and lectal knowledge
- Lectosystematic basis of language
- Systematic basis of a text
- Transsystematization
- Transtextization
- Language and lect use (linguation and lectation)Transudation
- Typal and sortai diversity of the language domain
- 3. Axiomatics
- 4. Language communication
- 5. Lingual and lectal communities
- 6. Variability and stability of language
- 7 Concluding remarks
- Notes
- References
- Understanding Understanding
- 1. The principle of concept formation
- 2. The principle of understanding
- References
- Non-reducible Grammatical Relations without Semantic Content
- 1. The set of classical grammatical relations
- 1.1 Reducibility
- 1.2 Semantic content1.3 Justifying the GR-C-Postulate
- 2. The German Prefield-es
- 2.I The problem
- 2.2 The solution
- 3. Other constructions with diff nm-occurrences
- 4 Summary
- References
- Are Linguistic Objects Internal, External, or Both?
- 0. Introduction
- 1. The terms of the discussion
- 2. Radical internalism
- 3. The representational hypothesis
- 4. Conclusion
- References
- Some Thoughts on Being Minimal
- 1. Introduction: Descartes versus Socrates
- 2. Rules and lists
- 3. Generalizations � universal and particular � and SchrÜdinger's cat4. Primitives and derived notions
- 5. Conclusions
- References
- Case Morphology and Case System in L1 Acquisition
- 0. Introduction
- 1. Case-theoretic preliminaries
- 2. A German child's acquisition of case
- 2.I Data base and general assumptions
- 2.2 Prenominai genitives and early accusatives
- 2.3 On the absence of prepositions and articles
- 2.4 Accusative and dative contexts
- 3. Interpreting Lisa's acquisition of case
- 3.1 On the role of pronominal case forms
- 3.2 The Prepositional Spurt and the emergence of datives3.3 Acquiring Dat-Acc- and Dat-verbs
- 4. Conclusion
- References
- Explorations in 'Idiolects
- 1. Problem space
- 2. Laudatio: Lieb's solution of the 'idiolect' problem in variation
- 3. Testing theoretical assumptions: On the change of idiolect systems in contemporary German
- 3.1 Remarks on the elicitation design
- 3.2 The problem of 'verb-final' in standard clauses and as property of idiolect systems
- 3.3 Language change in German after the fall of the wall?
- 4. Outlook
- References