04376nam 2200685 450 991082224870332120230807193209.090-272-6888-6(CKB)3710000000477114(EBL)4000700(SSID)ssj0001555027(PQKBManifestationID)16179830(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001555027(PQKBWorkID)12249863(PQKB)10993044(PQKBManifestationID)15963412(PQKBWorkID)14351276(PQKB)23183023(MiAaPQ)EBC4000700(DLC) 2014046397(EXLCZ)99371000000047711420160301h20152015 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrThe diachrony of grammar /T. GivónAmsterdam, [Netherlands] ;Philadelphia, [Pennsylvania] :John Benjamins Publishing Company,2015.©20151 online resource (875 p.)Description based upon print version of record.90-272-1220-1 Includes bibliographical references and indexes.4. A wild safari through the jungle of English derivational morphology4.1 Causative suffixes; 4.2 Nominalized verb-phrase compounds; 4.3 Pre-verbal incorporated prepositions; 4.4 OV nominalizations and the GEN-N noun-phrase order; 4.5 The noun-to-adjective derivational suffix -ly; 4.6 The noun-to-verb derivational prefix en-; 4.7 Noun-to-noun derivational suffixes; 5. Discussion; 5.1 The morphogenesis cycle and the attrition of bound morphemes; 5.2 Do all bound morphemes come from lexical words?; 5.3 Historical syntax and synchronic morphology; 5.4 Moral; Abbreviations of grammatical termsFrom discourse to syntax: Grammar as a processing strategy1. Introduction ; 2. The diachrony of syntacticization; 2.1 Overview; 2.2 From topic to subject; 2.3 From topicalization to passivization; 2.4 From conjoined topic clause to embedded relative clause; 2.5 From conjoined to embedded verb complements; 2.6 Resultative verb compounds in Mandarin; 2.7 Complex possessive constructions; 2.8 Focus clauses and WH-questions; 2.9 From clause-chaining to serial-verb clauses; 2.10 Interim summary; 3. Pidgin vs. Creole language; 4. Child vs. adult language5. Informal oral vs. formal-written adult discourse6. Discussion; 6.1 Coding modalities and developmental trends; 6.2 The diachronic cycle; 6.3 Diachrony and typological diversity; 6.4 Universality, evolution and explanation; 6.5 Grammar as an automated processing strategy ; Abbreviation of grammatical terms; Where does crazy syntax come from?; 1. Introduction ; 2. Crazy synchronic phonology; 3. Case studies; 3.1 The Kimbundu passive revisited; 3.2 The Kihungan cleft and WH-question revisited; 3.3 German REL-clauses revisited3.4 Unintended consequences of compressing chained clauses into serial-verb clauses3.4.1 The ba-construction in Mandarin Chines; 3.4.2 The de-verbal conjunction of Yoruba; 3.4.3 Word-order in Ijo; 3.5 German word-order and tense-aspect renovation; 3.6 The Romance and Bantu object pronouns revisited; 3.7 No. Uto-Aztecan nominalized subordinate clauses; 4. Discussion; 4.1 Naturalness: Commonality vs. ease of processing; 4.2 The temporal curve of the diachronic cycle; 4.3 Naturalness: Synchrony vs. diachrony; Abbreviation of grammatical terms; PART II. Out of AfricaOn the diachrony of the Bantu copula niGrammar, Comparative and generalSyntaxGrammar, Comparative and generalMorphologyLanguage and languagesOriginRole and reference grammarFunctional discourse grammarPsycholinguisticsGrammar, Comparative and generalSyntax.Grammar, Comparative and generalMorphology.Language and languagesOrigin.Role and reference grammar.Functional discourse grammar.Psycholinguistics.415Givón Talmy1936-386338MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910822248703321The diachrony of grammar4056693UNINA