Fr. 217.20

Restrictiveness in Case Theory

English · Hardback

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Informationen zum Autor Henry Smith (1550-1600) was a zealous and eloquent Puritan divine educated in Lincoln College, Oxford. He was generally esteemed as the first great preacher in the nation, and was looked upon as the "silver-tongued preacher" due to his lucid memory and practical preaching. Klappentext Henry Smith here develops a theory of syntactic case and examines its synchronic and diachronic consequences. Within a unification-based framework! the book draws out pervasive patterns in the relationship between morphosyntax ("linking") and grammatical function. The theory proposed consists of three ordered constraints on the association of NPs and arguments! based on the central notion of "restrictiveness". Beginning with a detailed study of dative substitution in Icelandic! the author moves on to examine a wide array of synchronic and diachronic data and to construct a typology of case. Theoretically innovative and sophisticated! and descriptively wide-ranging! this book will appeal to all those interested in the cross-linguistic marking of case and the ways in which case systems may change over time. Zusammenfassung Henry Smith develops a theory of syntactic case and examines its synchronic and diachronic consequences. Within a unification-based framework! the book draws out pervasive patterns in the relationship between morphosyntax 'linking' and grammatical function! with an examination of a wide array of synchronic and diachronic data. Inhaltsverzeichnis Acknowledgements; 1. Introduction; 2. Argument case and case alternations; 3. A typology of case systems; 4. Linker interactions; 5. Icelandic; 6. Changes in linking; 7. Case semi-preservation; 8. Conclusions; Notes; References; Index.

Product details

Authors Henry Smith
Assisted by S. R. Anderson (Editor), J. Bresnan (Editor)
Publisher Cambridge University Press ELT
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 17.10.1996
 
EAN 9780521462877
ISBN 978-0-521-46287-7
No. of pages 342
Series Cambridge Studies in Linguisti
Cambridge Studies in Linguisti
Subject Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > General and comparative linguistics

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