Argument Realization
This volume presents seven essays that survey fundamental argument realization issues within a typologically broad range of languages. The papers examine, within the architecture of Lexical-Functional Grammar (LFG), the variety of ways in which arguments of a predicate may be realized in the syntax. LFG allows for the complex interactions of arguments, syntactic positions and grammatical functions. Regardless of the complexity or simplicity of the predicational structure of a clause, the papers included show how the relationship between arguments and their overt realization can be dealt with. The papers also treat multiple case marking in Australian languages, possessor alternation in Welsh, directional complex predicates in American Indian languages and causatives in Japanese. They discuss representational issues that encompass underspecification and the encoding of semantic information needed to determine the correspondence of thematic arguments to their overt syntactic realization.
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Argument Realization
This volume presents seven essays that survey fundamental argument realization issues within a typologically broad range of languages. The papers examine, within the architecture of Lexical-Functional Grammar (LFG), the variety of ways in which arguments of a predicate may be realized in the syntax. LFG allows for the complex interactions of arguments, syntactic positions and grammatical functions. Regardless of the complexity or simplicity of the predicational structure of a clause, the papers included show how the relationship between arguments and their overt realization can be dealt with. The papers also treat multiple case marking in Australian languages, possessor alternation in Welsh, directional complex predicates in American Indian languages and causatives in Japanese. They discuss representational issues that encompass underspecification and the encoding of semantic information needed to determine the correspondence of thematic arguments to their overt syntactic realization.
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Argument Realization

Argument Realization

Argument Realization

Argument Realization

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Overview

This volume presents seven essays that survey fundamental argument realization issues within a typologically broad range of languages. The papers examine, within the architecture of Lexical-Functional Grammar (LFG), the variety of ways in which arguments of a predicate may be realized in the syntax. LFG allows for the complex interactions of arguments, syntactic positions and grammatical functions. Regardless of the complexity or simplicity of the predicational structure of a clause, the papers included show how the relationship between arguments and their overt realization can be dealt with. The papers also treat multiple case marking in Australian languages, possessor alternation in Welsh, directional complex predicates in American Indian languages and causatives in Japanese. They discuss representational issues that encompass underspecification and the encoding of semantic information needed to determine the correspondence of thematic arguments to their overt syntactic realization.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781684000036
Publisher: CSLI
Publication date: 01/15/2017
Series: Studies in Constraint-Based Lexicalism
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 246
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Miriam Butt is professor for general and computational linguistics at the University of Konstanz.

Tracy Holloway King is principal scientist in Adobe's Sensei and Search organization, focusing on natural language processing.

Table of Contents

Contributors
Preface and Acknowledgements
1. Introduction
Miriam Butt and Tracy Holloway King
2. Multiple Case and the ‘Wimpiness’ of Morphology
Kersti Börjars and Nigel Vincent
3. Australian Case Systems: Towards a Constructive Solution
Rachel Nordlinger
4. Noun Phrase Structure in Welsh
Louisa Sadler
5. Choctaw Directionals and the Syntax of Complex Predication
George Aaron Broadwell
6. Crosslinguistic Parameterization of Causative Predicates
Yo Matsumoto
7. Underspecification in Lexical Mapping Theory
Helge Lødrup
8. Derived Nominals, Possessors, and Lexical Mapping Theory
Tibor Laczkó
Subject Index
Name Index
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