Form and Function in Language Research
  1. 362 pages
  2. English
  3. PDF
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - PDF

About this book

Language description enriches linguistic theory and linguistic theory sharpens language description. Based on evidence from the world's languages, functional-typological linguistics has established a number of thorough generalizations about the nature of linguistic categorizations and their manifestation in natural languages. Empirical studies in these fields of linguistics have contributed to sharpen linguistic theory in several respects.

This volume is a collection of 19 contributions from outstanding scholars in the field of functional-typological linguistics that address fundamental issues in the study of language, such as the nature of linguistic categories, the constitution of functional domains, and the form of cross-linguistic continua. Empirical data from individual languages and from typological samples are investigated in order to achieve generalizations about the properties of human grammar(s). Several grammatical phenomena are dealt with including tonal systems, person distinctions, modalities, reciprocity, complex predicates, grammatical relations, word order, clause linkage, and information structure.

The structure of the book illustrates the fundamental importance of the analytical distinction between the onomasiological and the semasiological approach to language and language diversity. Both perspectives are integrated in most papers with a dominant focus on either the former or the latter perspective.

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Yes, you can access Form and Function in Language Research by Johannes Helmbrecht, Yoko Nishina, Yong-Min Shin, Stavros Skopeteas, Elisabeth Verhoeven, Johannes Helmbrecht,Yoko Nishina,Yong-Min Shin,Stavros Skopeteas,Elisabeth Verhoeven in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Languages & Linguistics & Grammar & Punctuation. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Table of contents

  1. Frontmatter
  2. Contents
  3. Glosses
  4. Introduction
  5. The continuum of pragmaticity: a sketch
  6. Weighing semantic distinctions in person forms
  7. Spatial reciprocity: between grammar and lexis
  8. A chapter in marginal possession: on being six(ty) in Europe (and beyond)
  9. Thoughts on (im)perfective imperatives
  10. Animacy and argument hierarchy in conflict: constraints on object-topicalization in Korean
  11. Zero and nothing in Jarawara
  12. Clause linkage in a language without coordination: the adjoined clause in Iatmul
  13. Once more on linguistic categories
  14. Questions surrounding the basic notions of the word, lexie, morpheme, and lexeme
  15. Linguistic typology and language theory: the various faces of syntax
  16. Linking without grammatical relations in Yucatec: alignment, extraction, and control
  17. Areal typology of tone-consonant interaction and implosives in Kwa, Kru, and Southern-Mande
  18. The internal structure of adpositional phrases
  19. On the form of complex predicates: toward demystifying serial verbs
  20. Conjunctive coordination in Amharic: some typological approaches
  21. Linguistic type and complexity: some remarks
  22. Constituent questions and argument-focus constructions: some data from the North-Caucasian languages
  23. “A lot of grammar with a good portion of lexicon”: towards a typology of partitive and pseudopartitive nominal constructions
  24. Backmatter