02007nam 2200445Ia 450 99639745310331620200824132612.0(CKB)4940000000059884(EEBO)2264185856(OCoLC)ocm17468731e(OCoLC)17468731(EXLCZ)99494000000005988419880212d1682 uy |engurbn||||a|bb|The whole duty of man[electronic resource] laid down in a plain and familiar way for the use of all, but especially the meanest reader : divided into XVII chapters, one whereof being read every Lord's Day the whole may be read over thrice in the year : necessary for all families : with Private devotions for several occasionsLondon Printed by R. Norton for Robert Pawlet ...1682[24], 472, [6] p., [2] leaves of plates illVariously attributed to Lady Dorothy Pakington, Richard Sterne, John Fell, Humphrey Henchman, and others; now generally ascribed to Richard Allestree. Cf. DNB.Added engraved t.p.; engraved frontispiece with royal coat of arms.Advertisement: p. [24]"Private devotions for several occasions" has special t.p. and continuous paging.Includes index.Reproduction of original in the Union Theologial Seminaey Library, New York.eebo-0160Christian lifeEarly works to 1800Devotional exercisesChristian lifeDevotional exercises.Allestree Richard1619-1681.793142Pakington Dorothy CoventryLady,d. 1679.1001112Sterne Richard1596?-1683.1001111Fell John1625-1686.1001113Henchman Humphrey1592-1675.793659UMIWaOLNBOOK996397453103316The whole duty of man2343430UNISA05450nam 2200637 a 450 991078592880332120230801225144.01-283-89491-290-272-7331-6(CKB)2670000000272577(EBL)1043406(OCoLC)815672122(SSID)ssj0000756879(PQKBManifestationID)12304677(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000756879(PQKBWorkID)10753637(PQKB)10602485(MiAaPQ)EBC1043406(Au-PeEL)EBL1043406(CaPaEBR)ebr10613336(CaONFJC)MIL420741(EXLCZ)99267000000027257720120627d2012 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrSentence patterns in English and Hebrew[electronic resource] /Ron KuzarAmsterdam ;Philadelphia John Benjamins Pub. Co.20121 online resource (272 p.)Constructional approaches to language,1573-594X ;v. 12Description based upon print version of record.90-272-0434-9 Includes bibliographical references and indexes.Sentence Patterns in English and Hebrew; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Dedication page; Table of contents; Acknowledgements; Chapter 1. Introduction; 1.1 Preliminary discussion; 1.2 In search of an elegant architecture; 1.3 Argument structure constructions cannot encode linearization; 1.4 A top-down approach to construction analysis; 1.5 Sentence patterns; 1.6 Argument structure mapped onto sentence patterns; 1.7 Categorial affiliation and sentential functional roles; 1.8 Unmarked and marked sentence patterns; 1.9 Major and minor S-patterns; 1.10 The structure of this book1.11 Summary and conclusion of Chapter 1Chapter 2. Subject initial sentence patterns; 2.1 Preliminary discussion; 2.2 Subject initial S-patterns in English; 2.3 The verbal S-pattern in English; 2.4 The copular S-patterns in English; 2.4.1 The form and function of copular S-patterns in English; 2.4.2 Copular verbs; 2.4.3 Generalizations over the three COP S-patterns; 2.4.4 Predication and patterning in the COP sentence; 2.4.5 The borderline between copular and lexical verbs; 2.4.6 Form and function of the unified COP S-Pattern; 2.5 Subject-initial S-patterns in Hebrew2.6 The verbal S-pattern in Hebrew2.7 The copular S-patterns in Hebrew; 2.8 Summary and conclusion of Chapter 2; Chapter 3. Predicate initial sentence patterns; 3.1 Justifying predicate initial S-patterns; 3.2 Predicate-initial S-patterns in English; 3.2.1 The existential S-pattern in English; 3.2.2 The evaluative S-pattern in English; 3.2.3 The environmental S-pattern in English; 3.3 Predicate-initial S-patterns in Hebrew; 3.3.1 The existential S-pattern in Hebrew; 3.3.2 The existential S-pattern in Hebrew - continued; 3.3.3 The evaluative S-pattern in Hebrew3.3.4 The environmental S-pattern in Hebrew3.4 Summary and conclusion of Chapter 3; Chapter 4. A field of sentence patterns; 4.1 Fields; 4.2 The field of S-pattern networks in English and Hebrew; 4.3 Granularity; 4.4 Summary and conclusion of Chapter 4; Chapter 5. The conceptual category of existence; 5.1 Preliminary discussion; 5.2 Conceptual category; 5.3 Core and periphery of the conceptual category of existence in English; 5.3.1 The core of the conceptual category of existence in English; 5.3.2 The first ring of the conceptual category of existence in English5.3.3 The second ring of the conceptual category of existence in English5.3.4 The third ring of the conceptual category of existence in English; 5.4 Core and periphery of the conceptual category of existence in Hebrew; 5.4.1 The core of the conceptual category of existence in Hebrew; 5.4.2 Stylistic inversion of S1 versus genuine P1 order; 5.4.3 The first ring of the conceptual category of existence in Hebrew; 5.4.4 The second ring of the conceptual category of existence in Hebrew; 5.4.5 The third ring of the conceptual category of existence in Hebrew; 5.5 Summary and conclusion of Chapter 5Chapter 6. The conceptual category of evaluationSentence Patterns in English and Hebrew offers an innovative perspective on sentential syntax, in which sentence patterns are introduced as constructions within the general framework of Construction Grammar. Drawing on naturally occurring data collected from the Internet, the study challenges the prevailing view of predication as the sole mechanism of sentence formation, and introduces the idea of patterning as a complementary, sometimes even alternative mechanism. Major sentence patterns of English and Hebrew are systematically presented, targeting both their form and theConstructional Approaches to LanguageEnglish languageGrammar, ComparativeHebrewHebrew languageGrammar, ComparativeEnglishEnglish languageGrammar, ComparativeHebrew.Hebrew languageGrammar, ComparativeEnglish.492.4/5Kuzar Ron1947-507045MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910785928803321Sentence patterns in English and Hebrew3718094UNINA