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"Building on a substantial earlier literature, the chapters in this volume further advance knowledge and understanding of properties of the noun phrase in English. The empirical material for the papers includes both historical and present-day data, with the two often shedding light on each other in a process of mutual illumination. The topics addressed are: the structure of nounless NPs like the poor and the obvious; the article/zero alternation in expressions like go to (the) church; developments in the early history of adjective stacking; the semantics of N + clause units in present-day English; the history of N + BE + clause constructions; and the decline of two anaphoric NPs in Early Modern English. The volume will appeal to scholars working in this area and will also help those interested in the general field of English grammar to keep abreast of recent methods and results in NP-related work"--
Grammar --- English language --- Noun phrase --- Complex nominals --- Phrasal noun --- Subject --- Noun phrase. --- Germanic languages
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"Despite a significant increase in interest over the last two decades in the English Noun Phrase, there are still many open questions and unexplored issues. The papers collected in this volume contribute to this ongoing research by addressing a range of topics concerning the internal structure, use and development of English Noun Phrases. The eleven chapters represent three main themes: 1. Determination, modification and complementation; 2. Shell nouns and the X-is construction; 3. Binominal constructions. These topics are approached in different ways: some chapters are synchronic in nature, others diachronic; and while most subscribe to functional-cognitive modelling, some take a more formal approach. In addition, different methodologies are employed, varying from qualitative and quantitative corpus analyses to experimental methods. As a result, the contributions to this volume represent both the main topics currently discussed in research on the English Noun Phrase, and the diversity in the way these topics are investigated"--
Grammar --- English language --- Noun phrase. --- Complex nominals --- Phrasal noun --- Subject --- Germanic languages
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Grammar, Comparative and general --- Noun phrase --- Subject (Grammar) --- Noun --- Complex nominals --- Subject --- Nominals --- Lexicology. Semantics --- Linguistics --- Philology
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This book explores noun phrase complexity in English, showing that it is best accounted for both by a linear and a hierarchical parameter: its length and its type of postmodifier(s). The study is methodologically unique in that it combines univariate and multivariate analyses in an investigation of four different syntactic variables. Drawing on more than three billion words of British and American data, Eva Berlage shows that the length and the structure of the NPs, along with language-external factors such as the regional variety of English, work as powerful determinants of the variation. On a theoretical level, the book reveals that the structural complexity of NPs cannot be sufficiently captured by (phrasal) node counts but that we need to incorporate the degree to which NPs are sentential. The book is designed for researchers and students interested in syntax, language variation, sociolinguistics, structural complexity and the history of English.
English language --- Noun phrase. --- Syntax. --- Complex nominals --- Phrasal noun --- Subject --- Germanic languages --- English language - Noun phrase --- English language - Syntax
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English language --- -English language --- -Germanic languages --- Adjective --- Noun phrase --- -Adjective --- Complex nominals --- Phrasal noun --- Subject --- Nominals --- Germanic languages --- Anglais (langue) --- Semantique
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Crosslinguistic Studies on Noun Phrase Structure and Reference contains 11 studies on the grammar of noun phrases. Part One explores NP-structure and the impact of information structure, countability and number marking on interpretation, using data from Russian, Armenian, Hebrew, Brazilian Portuguese, Karitiana, Turkish, English, Catalan and Danish. Part Two examines language specific definiteness marking strategies in spoken and signed languages-differentiated definiteness marking in Germanic, double definiteness in Greek, adnominal demonstratives in Japanese, 'weak' definiteness in Martiniké and the special referring options made avilable by signing. Part Three examines the second-language acquisition of genericity in English, Spanish and Brazilian Portuguese. This volume will be of interest to researchers and students in syntax, formal semantics, and language acquisition.
Grammar, Comparative and general --- Noun phrase. --- Syntagme nominal --- Noun phrase --- Subject (Grammar) --- Complex nominals --- Subject --- Nominals --- Comparative linguistics --- Grammar --- Linguistics --- Philology
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Distinguishing the components that make up the meaning of a noun enables us to understand what permits us to say "Ground temperature plus one degrees," or to invent "small is beautiful." A careful look at the meaning and role of -'s and of words like a/the, any/some, this/that, often found in noun phrases, reveals how they refer to the speaker's message. Examining pronouns pin-points the fundamental role of the representation of a grammatical person in all noun phrases.
English language --- Grammar, Comparative and general --- Noun phrase --- Subject (Grammar) --- Noun phrase. --- Complex nominals --- Phrasal noun --- Subject --- Nominals --- Linguistics --- Philology --- Germanic languages
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The articles in this volume analyse the noun phrase within the framework of Functional Discourse Grammar (FDG), the successor to Simon C. Dik's Functional Grammar. In its current form, FDG has an explicit top-down organization and distinguishes four hierarchically organized, interacting levels: (i) the interpersonal level (language as communicational process), (ii) the representational level (language as a carrier of content), (iii) the morphosyntactic level and (iv) the phonological level. Together they constitute the grammatical component, which in its turn interacts with a cognitive and a communicative component. This comprehensive approach to linguistic analysis is also reflected in this volume, which contains rich and substantial contributions concerning many different aspects of the noun phrase. At the same time, the analysis of a major linguistic construction from various perspectives is an excellent way to test a new model of grammar with regard to some of the standards of adequacy for linguistic theories. The book contains several papers dealing with matters of representation and formalization of the noun phrase (the articles by Kees Hengeveld, José Luis González Escribano, Jan Rijkhoff and Evelien Keizer). Other contributors are more concerned with the practical application of the model with regard to discourse-interpersonal matters (Chris Butler, John H. Connolly), whereas the chapters by Dik Bakker and Roland Pfau and by Daniel García Velasco deal with morphosyntactic issues. In all, the variety of issues addressed and the range of languages considered prove that one of the important advantages of the FDG model is precisely the fact that grammatical phenomena can be treated from a semantic, pragmatic, morpho-syntactic, phonological or textual perspective in a coherent fashion.
Grammar, Comparative and general --- Functional discourse grammar. --- Functional grammar --- Discourse analysis --- Functionalism (Linguistics) --- Noun phrase --- Subject (Grammar) --- Noun phrase. --- Complex nominals --- Subject --- Nominals --- Linguistics --- Philology --- Functional Grammar. --- syntax.
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"The 'NP' is one of the least controversial grammatical units that linguists work with. The NP is often assumed to be universal, and appears to be robust cross-linguistically (compared to 'VP' or even 'clause') in that it can be manipulated in argument positions in constructed examples. Furthermore, for any given language, its internal structure (order and type of modifiers) tends to be relatively fixed. Surprisingly, however, the empirical basis for 'NP' has never been established. The chapters in this volume examine the NP in ordinary interactions from diverse languages, including little-studied languages as well as better-researched ones, in a variety of interactional settings. Together, these chapters show that cross-linguistically, the category NP is not as robust as has been assumed: it is realized only in temporally unfolding human interaction, its structural status thus constantly being negotiated in terms of participants' social agendas"--
Grammar --- Comparative linguistics --- E-books --- Grammar, Comparative and general --- Noun phrase. --- Noun phrase --- Subject (Grammar) --- Complex nominals --- Subject --- Nominals --- Linguistics --- Philology
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Lexicology. Semantics --- English language --- Grammar --- 802.0-56 --- -Germanic languages --- Engels: syntaxis; semantiek --- Noun --- Noun. --- 802.0-56 Engels: syntaxis; semantiek --- -Engels: syntaxis; semantiek --- -802.0-56 Engels: syntaxis; semantiek --- Germanic languages --- Noun phrase. --- Complex nominals --- Phrasal noun --- Subject --- Nominals
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