The contributions making up this volume in honor of Eloise Jelinek are written from a formalist perspective that deals with stereotypically functionalist questions about language. Jelinek's pioneering work in formalist syntax has shown that autonomous syntax need not exist in a vacuum. Her work has highlighted the importance of incorporating the effects of discourse and information structure on the syntactic representation. This book aims to invoke Jelinek's work either in substance or spirit. The focus is on Jelinek's influential Pronominal Argument Hypothesis as an "non-configurational" language; the influence of discourse-related interface phenomena on syntactic structure; the syntactic analysis of the grammaticalization; interactions between morphology, phonology and phonetics; and foundational issues about the link between formal grammar and function of language, as well as the methodological issues underlying the different approaches to linguistics.
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Topics covered in this volume include: the significance of Eloise Jelinek's pronominal argument hypothesis; agreement, dislocation and partial configurationality; attitude evaluation in complex NPs; and rapid perceptibility as a factor underlying universals of vowel inventories.
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1. Contributors; 2. Acknowledgments; 3. Introduction: Formalizing Functionalism (by Carnie, Andrew); 4. Part I: The Pronominal Argument Hypothesis; 5. On the significance of Eloise Jelinek's Pronominal Argument Hypothesis (by Hale, Kenneth L.); 6. Categories and pronominal arguments (by Bach, Emmon); 7. Doubling by Agreement in Slave (Northern Athapaskan) (by Rice, Keren); 8. Quasi objects in St'at'imcets: On the (semi-)independence of Agreement and Case (by Davis, Henry); 9. Agreement, dislocation, and partial configurationality (by Baker, Mark C.); 10. Part II: Interfaces; 11. Multiple multiple questions (by Diesing, Molly); 12. Attitude evaluation in complex NPs (by Nichols, Lynn); 13. Topic-Focus articulation and degrees of salience in the Prague Dependency Treebank (by Sgall, Petr); 14. Word order and discourse genre in Tohono O'odham (by Fitzgerald, Colleen M.); 15. The prosody of interrogative and focus constructions in Navajo (by McDonough, Joyce); 16. Subject number agreement, grammaticalization, and transitivity in the Cupeno verb construction (by Hill, Jane H.); 17. Lexical irregularity in OT: DOT vs. Variable Constraint Ranking (by Archangeli, Diana); 18. Rapid perceptibility as a factor underlying universals of vowel inventories (by Warner, Natasha); 19. Part III: Foundational issues; 20. Argument hierarchies and the mapping principle (by Jelinek, Eloise); 21. Focus movement and the nature of uninterpretable features (by Karimi, Simin); 22. Merge (by Langendoen, D. Terence); 23. Phonotactics and probabilistic ranking (by Hammond, Michael); 24. Deconstructing functionalist explanations of linguistic universals (by Bever, Thomas G.); 25. References; 26. Name index; 27. Subject index
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9789027227850
Publisert
2003-03-20
Utgiver
Vendor
John Benjamins Publishing Co
Vekt
655 gr
Høyde
245 mm
Bredde
164 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet