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This volume presents the latest research in linguistic modules and interfaces in Lexical-Functional Grammar. It draws on data from a range of typologically diverse languages, including Arabic, Icelandic, Kelabit, Polish, and Urdu, and will be of interest to all those working on linguistic interfaces from a variety of theoretical standpoints.
List of contents
- 1: Ronald M. Kaplan and Joan Bresnan: Introduction
- Part I: Architecture and ontology
- 2: Avery Andrews: A speculation about what linguistic structures might be
- 3: Ash Asudeh: The unrealized and the unheard
- Part II: Constructions and agreement in a modular architecture
- 4: Bozhil Hristov: An LFG analysis of AANN constructions: 'A staggering ten doctoral dissertations'
- 5: Louisa Sadler: On the construct state in Arabic
- 6: Miriam Butt and Tracy Holloway King: Agreement in Urdu adjectival adverbials
- 7: Peter Hurst and Rachel Nordlinger: An LFG approach to Icelandic reciprocal constructions
- Part III: Argument structure and grammatical functions
- 8: Annie Zaenen and Elisabet Engdahl: Four Swedish verbs and a functional distinction
- 9: Helge Lødrup: Deagentivizing Norwegian verbs with reflexive and body part objects
- 10: Ida Toivonen: Perception verbs, copy raising, and evidentiality in Swedish and English
- 11: Charlotte Hemmings: Subjects in Austronesian: Evidence from Kelabit
- 12: I Wayan Arka: Pivot and puzzling relativization in Indonesian
- Part IV: Categories: Synchrony and diachrony
- 13: Adam Przepiórkowski and Agnieszka Patejuk: Coordinate structures without syntactic categories
- 14: Kersti Börjars and John Payne: Decategorialization and Chinese nouns
- 15: Nigel Vincent: The 'of' word
- Part V: Representations beyond syntax
- 16: Oleg Belyaev: Paradigm structure influences syntactic behaviour: Ossetic case inflection
- 17: Louise Mycock, Chenzi Xu, and Aditi Lahiri: 'Wh'-question intonation in Standard Colloquial Bengali: An LFG analysis
- 18: Dick Crouch and Aikaterini-Lida Kalouli: Collectivist semantics
- 19: Andrew Kehler: Asymmetric anaphoric dependencies determine available readings for VP-ellipsis
- 20: Jamie Y. Findlay: Meaning in LFG
About the author
I Wayan Arka is Professor in Linguistics at The Australian National University and Universitas Udayana. His research interests include descriptive, theoretical, and typological linguistics, with areal focus on the Austronesian and Papuan languages of Indonesia. His research examines the interfaces of morphology, syntax, and semantics/pragmatics framed in a larger socio-cultural context. His current projects include the Enggano Project and the ethnobiological-linguistic documentation of Marori. He has carried out extensive linguistic fieldwork and organized capacity building/advocacy programs for minority language communities in Indonesia.
Ash Asudeh is a Professor in the Department of Linguistics and the Director of the Center for Language Sciences at the University of Rochester. He has previously held positions at the University of Oxford and Carleton University, with which he remains affiliated. His research interests include syntax, semantics, pragmatics, language and logic/computation, and cognitive science. His publications include The Logic of Pronominal Resumption (OUP, 2012), Lexical-Functional Syntax (with Joan Bresnan, Ida Toivonen, and Stephen Wechsler; Wiley-Blackwell, 2016), and Enriched Meanings (with Gianluca Giorgolo; OUP, 2020).
Tracy Holloway King is a principal scientist at Adobe, focusing on search and natural language processing. She has a PhD in Linguistics from Stanford University, where her dissertation was on how word order encodes discourse functions in Russian. She began her career in Xerox PARC's Natural Language Theory and Technology group, focusing on the implementation of broad coverage grammars in Lexical Functional Grammar. She then shifted her focus to search relevance and short text processing working at Microsoft Bing, eBay's Search Science team, Amazon's product search team, and now Adobe.
Summary
This volume presents the latest research in linguistic modules and interfaces in Lexical-Functional Grammar. It draws on data from a range of typologically diverse languages, including Arabic, Icelandic, Kelabit, Polish, and Urdu, and will be of interest to all those working on linguistic interfaces from a variety of theoretical standpoints.