The Grammar of Names

The Grammar of Names

Author: John M. Anderson

Publisher: OUP Oxford

Published: 2007-01-04

Total Pages: 388

ISBN-13: 0191538132

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This book is the first systematic account of the syntax and semantics of names. Drawing on work in onomastics, philosophy, and linguistics John Anderson examines the distribution and subcategorization of names within a framework of syntactic categories, and considers how the morphosyntactic behaviour of names connects to their semantic roles. He argues that names occur in two basic circumstances: one involving vocatives and their use in naming predications, where they are not definite; the other their use as arguments of predicators, where they are definite. This division is discussed in relation to English, French, Greek, and Seri, and a range of other languages. Professor Anderson reveals that the semantic status of names, including prototypicality, is crucial to understanding their morphosyntax and role in derivational relationships. He shows that semantically coherent subsets of names, such as those referring to people and places, are characterized by morphosyntactic properties which may vary from language to language. His original and important investigation will appeal to scholars and advanced students of linguistics and philosophy.


An Introduction to Transformational Grammar

An Introduction to Transformational Grammar

Author: Diane Bornstein

Publisher: University Press of America

Published: 1984

Total Pages: 276

ISBN-13: 9780819139054

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This volume, originally published by Winthrop Publishers in 1977, discusses transformational grammar in relation to traditional and structural grammar, enabling students to relate the theory to what they already know about grammar. Although all important technical terms and processes are presented, non-technical language is used as much as possible. Examples from literature and from actual language usage are employed throughout the book, and one section is devoted to practical applications to writing, reading, and literary criticism, and the understanding of dialects. A comprehensive glossary is provided.


Time and the Verb

Time and the Verb

Author: Robert I. Binnick

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 1991-06-20

Total Pages: 579

ISBN-13: 0195345134

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This comprehensive examination of tense and grammatical aspect provides fascinating insight into how languages indicate distinctions of time. Providing an in-depth survey of the scholarship from the ancient Greeks through the 1980s, Time and the Verb explains and evaluates every major issue and theory, concentrating on familiar Classical and modern European languages. An invaluable reference tool as well as a major contribution to the history of linguistic sciences, this book will be the standard against which future work on tense and aspect is measured.


A History of ELT, Second Edition

A History of ELT, Second Edition

Author: A.P.R. Howatt

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2004-06-03

Total Pages: 444

ISBN-13: 9780194421850

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Providing an introduction, this work contains sections on the British Empire.


An Introduction to Husserl's Phenomenology

An Introduction to Husserl's Phenomenology

Author: Jan Patocka

Publisher: Open Court Publishing

Published: 2018-05-03

Total Pages: 185

ISBN-13: 0812699866

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Patocka's celebrated Introduction, here made available in English for the first time, is not an introduction in the ordinary sense of the term. Patocka ranges over the whole of Husserl's output, from The Philosophy of Arithmetic to The Crisis of the European Sciences, and traces the evolution of all the central issues of Husserlian phenomenology--intentionality, categorial intuition, temporality, the subject-body; the concrete a priori, and transcendental subjectivity. But rather than attempting to give a tour of Husserl's workshop, Patocka is himself hard at work on Husserl's problems.


A - M

A - M

Author: Thomas A. Sebeok

Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG

Published: 2020-05-18

Total Pages: 604

ISBN-13: 3112322126

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No detailed description available for "A - M".


Chapters of Dependency Grammar

Chapters of Dependency Grammar

Author: András Imrényi

Publisher: John Benjamins Publishing Company

Published: 2020-02-06

Total Pages: 289

ISBN-13: 9027261709

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Was Tesnière the founding father of dependency grammar or merely a culmination point in its long history? Leaving no doubt that the latter position is correct, Chapters of Dependency Grammar tells the story of how dependency-oriented grammatical description developed from Antiquity up to the early 20th century. From Priscian’s Rome to Dmitrievsky’s Russia, from the French Encyclopaedia to Stephen W. Clark’s school grammars in 19th century America, it is shown how the concept of dependencies (asymmetric word-to-word relations) surfaced again and again, assuming a central place in syntax. A particularly intriguing aspect of the storyline is that even without any direct contact or influence, authors were making key breakthroughs in similar directions. In the works of Sámuel Brassai, a Transylvanian polymath, and Franz Kern, a German grammarian, the first dependency trees appear in 1873 and 1883, respectively, predating Tesnière’s stemmas by several decades.