Lexical-functional Syntax
Joan W. Bresnan(Author)
Blackwell Publishers
Published on 28. September 2000
Book
Hardback
456 pages
978-0-631-20973-7 (ISBN)
Description
"Lexical-Functional Syntax" is the definitive text for Lexical-Functional Grammar in the field of syntax. Complete with integrated pedagogy and problem sets to support the text, this book provides an accessible, empirically motivated treatment of the mathematical architecture of LFG. It also covers the theoretical linguistic ideas that LFG can model, and discusses the wide range of cross-linguistic syntactic phenomena to which it has been applied. The volume is essential to students and researchers who wish to look outside the Chomskyan framework for syntax. It shows why the Chomskyan formal architecture of structural transformations is less attractive for certain types of syntactic phenomena than an architecture of imperfect correspondences between parallel information structures. The book also illustrates how the best ideas from the transformational framework can be captured in a natural way. It gives a clear introduction to the fundamentals of a feature-logic based framework for syntax and provides extensive discussion of cross-linguistic applications, of particular interest to practitioners of feature-logic based approaches such as HPSG and Categorical Unification Grammar.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Publishing group
John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 244 mm
Width: 172 mm
Weight
1175 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-631-20973-7 (9780631209737)
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Schweitzer Classification
Content
Acknowledgements.Prologue.Part I: On the Architecture of Universal Grammar:1. Nonconfigurationality.2. Movement Paradoxes.3. Lexicality and Argument Structure.Part II: Formally Modelling the Architecture:4. A Formal Model of Syntactic Structure.5. Monotonicity and Some of Its Consequences.Part III: Inflectional Morphology and Phrase Structure Variation:6. A Theory of Structure-Function Mappings.7. Endocentricity and Heads.8. Pronoun Incorporation and Agreement.9. Topicalization and Scrambling.Part IV: On Functional Structures: Binding, Predication, and Control:10. Basic Binding Theory.11. Types of Bound anaphors.12. Predication Relations.13. Anaphoric Control.14. From Argument Structure to Functional Structure.Problem Sets and Solutions.References.Index.