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How grammar links concepts : verb-mediated constructions, attribution, perspectivizing / Friedrich Ungerer.
Author
Ungerer, Friedrich
[Browse]
Format
Book
Language
English
Εdition
1st ed.
Published/Created
Amsterdam ; Philadelphia : John Benjamins Publishing Company, [2017]
©2017
Description
1 online resource (341 pages) : illustrations.
Details
Subject(s)
Grammar, Comparative and general
—
Syntax
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Cognitive grammar
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Psycholinguistics
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Series
Human cognitive processing ; 57.
[More in this series]
Human cognitive processing, 1387-6724 ; 57
[More in this series]
Summary note
The proposed framework of concept linking combines insights of construction grammar with those of traditional functional descriptions to explain particularly challenging but often neglected areas of English grammar such as negation, modality, adverbials and non-finite constructions.
Bibliographic references
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Source of description
Description based on print version record.
Contents
Intro
How Grammar Links Concepts
Editorial page
Title page
LCC data
Table of contents
List of figures
List of tables
Chapter 1. Introduction
1.1 The present situation
1.2 Revived insights of traditional functionalism
1.3 The contribution of image schemas
1.4 The role of perspectives
1.5 A first summary of concept-linking mechanisms
1.6 The role of interfaces
1.7 Concept linking and language acquisition
1.8 The structure of the book
1.9 The status of the examples
Chapter 2. Mechanisms of concept linking
2.1 Verb-mediated constructions (VMCs)
2.1.1 Agent-driven VMCs
2.1.2 Other types of VMCs
2.2 Attribution
2.2.1 Attribution as modifying
2.2.2 Attribution as circumstancing
2.2.3 Attribution in complex sentences
2.3 Perspectivizing and scope phenomena
2.3.1 Sentence modes as grammaticalized perspectives
2.3.2 Deixis, agreement, and TAM perspectives
2.3.3 Negation, perspective, and the grammaticalization of scope
2.3.4 Perspectivizing use of adverbs
2.4 The inherent meaning of scope and attribution
2.5 Evidence for concept linking in spoken language
2.6 A first overview of concept-linking mechanisms
2.7 Postscript on concept linking and image schemas
2.7.1 Relationship of path, container, and part-whole to other image schemas
2.7.2 The spatial background of image schemas
2.7.3 Neurological claims for image schemas
Chapter 3. Hierarchy in concept linking
3.1 Introductory remarks on grammatical hierarchies
3.2 VMC and attribution hierarchies
3.2.1 The 'flatness' of the VMC hierarchy
3.2.2 The hierarchical flexibility of attribution
3.3 Hierarchical aspects of perspectivizing and scope
3.3.1 Hierarchical levels
3.3.2 Scope differentiation for viewpoint and person-oriented adverbs.
3.3.3 Scope hierarchy vs. scope competition: How time and frequency adverbs, emphasizers and not-negation function
3.3.4 The scope behavior of epistemic and deontic modals
3.4 Interlocking hierarchies: An example
3.5 Postscript on the notions of clause and complex sentence
3.5.1 The notion of clause
3.5.2 The notion of complex sentence
Chapter 4. Restrictions on concept linking
4.1 Restrictions on VMCs and attribution contrasted
4.2 Restrictions on perspectivizing
Chapter 5. Signaling concept linking: Word order, morphology, function words
5.1 The role of word order in concept linking
5.1.1 A preliminary classification
5.1.2 Word order as serialization of concept representations
5.1.3 Word order as adjacency of concept representations
5.1.4 Word order as indication of scope extension and the position of scope signals
5.2 The role of morphology and function words in concept linking
5.3 Word order, morphology and function words: An overview
Chapter 6. Concept linking, topic, comment and focusing
6.1 Introductory remarks on the influence of conceptual salience and informational prominence
6.2 Topic and comment in concept-linking
6.2.1 The narrow interpretation challenged: Topic and comment only as subject and predicate?
6.2.2 The wide interpretation: Topic and comment in attribution and perspectivizing
6.3 Introducing focusing
6.4 Positional focusing
6.4.1 Positional focusing and the focus potential of VMCs
6.4.2 Positional focusing, scene-setting and circumstancing
6.4.3 Complex focusing and scene-setting constructions (cleft sentences)
6.5 Perspectival focusing
6.5.1 Focusing adverbs, perspectival and positional focusing
6.5.2 Perspectival focusing vs. scope
6.5.3 Focus dominance vs. scope dominance in perspectivizing.
6.5.4 Scope and focus of connective adverbs
6.5.5 Scope and focus of not-negation
6.5.6 Scope and focus of TAM phenomena and sentence modes
6.6 Postscript on the role of given and new
Chapter 7. Introductory remarks on interfaces in concept linking: Introductory remarks on interfaces in concept linking
Chapter 8. Interfaces of verb-mediated constructions and attribution: Interfaces of verb-mediated constructions and attribution
8.1 Interfaces of VMCs and modifying
8.1.1 The copula/modifier interface
8.1.2 Extended copula/modifier interfaces and adjective complements
8.1.3 Other types of interface between VMCs and modifying
8.2 Interfaces of VMCs and circumstancing
8.2.1 Circumstancing, VMC integration and interfaces
8.2.2 Locative interfaces between circumstancing and VMCs
8.2.3 Interfaces for direction, source, course and goal
8.2.4 time when and time duration in concept linking
8.2.5 time frequency in concept linking
8.2.6 Interfaces for agent, instrument, method and plain manner concepts
8.2.7 Participant/circumstance interfaces: An overview
8.3 Participant/circumstance interfaces, prepositional verbs and phrasal verbs
8.3.1 Constructions with prepositional verbs as interfaces
8.3.2 Constructions with phrasal verbs
Chapter 9. Interfaces of perspectivizing and attribution (adverb interfaces): Interfaces of perspectivizing and attribution (adverb interfaces)
9.1 Interfaces of perspectivizing and circumstancing
9.1.1 Clause-final manner adverbs as interfaces
9.1.2 Clause-final position of frequency and viewpoint adverbs: Interface or afterthought?
9.2 Adjectival adverbs
9.2.1 Adjectival adverbs as interface phenomenon
9.2.2 Adjectival adverbs and elementary adjectives
9.3 Perspectivizing, modifying and interfaces to express degree.
9.3.1 ly-adverbs of degree as perspectivizers
9.3.2 Adjectival adverbs of degree as modifiers
9.3.3 measure-based degree adverbs
9.3.4 Sort of and kind of as degree adverbs
9.3.5 Adverbs expressing degree: An overview
Chapter 10. Non-finite constructions as interfaces of VMCs, attribution and perspectivizing: Non-finite constructions as interfaces of VMCs, attribution and perspectivizing
10.1 Introduction
10.2 Outline of the concept-linking analysis of non-finite constructions
10.2.1 Plain non-finite constructions as interfaces
10.2.2 Notional subjects of non-finite constructions as attributed referents
10.2.3 'Object+infinitive' and related constructions as interfaces
10.3 Selected phenomena of non-finite interfaces
10.3.1 Non-finite interfaces introduced by for and other prepositions
10.3.2 Subject-related and speaker-related participles as circumstances
10.3.3 Absolute participles and with-constructions
10.4 Postscript on the terminology of gerund and participles
Chapter 11. Interfaces and the grammaticalization of perspectivizers: Interfaces and the grammaticalization of perspectivizers
11.1 Interfaces and cross-mechanism grammaticalization
11.2 From verb+infinitive to complex predicates with modal perspectivizers
11.3 From two VMCs to viewpoint perspectivizer+VMC
11.3.1 Statements introduced by I think
11.3.2 Questions introduced by (what) do you think
11.4 Final overview of interfaces
Chapter 12. Introductory remarks on concept linking in language acquisition: Introductory remarks on concept linking in language acquisition
Chapter 13. Temporal priority of attribution in early language acquisition: Temporal priority of attribution in early language acquisition
13.1 Early attribution and the pilot corpus
13.2 Non-verbal two-word-plus items as attribution.
13.2.1 Early attribution links (EALs)
13.2.2 Pivot structures
13.2.3 Attribution and caregiver speech (CDS)
13.3 Verb-containing two-word-plus items as attribution
Chapter 14. The emergence of VMCs and copula/modifier interfaces: The emergence of VMCs and copula/modifier interfaces
14.1 The role of the subject participant in acquiring VMCs
14.2 The put-construction as acquisition model
14.3 The want-construction as acquisition model
14.4 From deictic attribution to copula/modifier interfaces
Chapter 15. The development of perspectivizing mechanisms: The development of perspectivizing mechanisms
15.1 Concept linking and the notion of partial achievement
15.2 The perspectivizing of negation
15.3 Interrogative perspectivizing
15.3.1 Questions introduced by what
15.3.2 Questions introduced by where and by other interrogatives
15.3.3 Yes/no-questions
15.4 The perspectivizing of TAM modality
15.5 Perspectivizing and the backdoor entry to complex constructions
15.5.1 From modal perspectivizers to object+infinitive constructions
15.5.2 From viewpoint perspectivizers to complex sentences
15.5.3 Postscript on relative clauses
Chapter 16. Conclusion and outlook
16.1 Concept linking, traditional grammar, other linguistic approaches
16.2 Temporal priorities in language acquisition
16.3 Outlook: Graded transfer claims for cross-linguistic application
References
Name index
Subject index.
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How grammar links concepts : verb-mediated constructions, attribution, perspectivizing / Friedrich Ungerer.
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