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Advances in functional linguistics [[electronic resource] ] : Columbia School beyond its origins / / edited by Joseph Davis, Radmila J. Gorup, Nancy Stern
Advances in functional linguistics [[electronic resource] ] : Columbia School beyond its origins / / edited by Joseph Davis, Radmila J. Gorup, Nancy Stern
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : J. Benjamins, c2006
Descrizione fisica x, 344 p
Disciplina 410.1/8
Altri autori (Persone) DavisJoseph <1958->
GorupRadmila Jovanović
SternNancy <1959->
Collana Studies in functional and structural linguistics
Soggetto topico Functionalism (Linguistics)
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 1-282-15492-3
9786612154928
90-272-9280-9
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNINA-9910454653303321
Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : J. Benjamins, c2006
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Advances in functional linguistics [[electronic resource] ] : Columbia School beyond its origins / / edited by Joseph Davis, Radmila J. Gorup, Nancy Stern
Advances in functional linguistics [[electronic resource] ] : Columbia School beyond its origins / / edited by Joseph Davis, Radmila J. Gorup, Nancy Stern
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : J. Benjamins, c2006
Descrizione fisica x, 344 p
Disciplina 410.1/8
Altri autori (Persone) DavisJoseph <1958->
GorupRadmila Jovanović
SternNancy <1959->
Collana Studies in functional and structural linguistics
Soggetto topico Functionalism (Linguistics)
ISBN 1-282-15492-3
9786612154928
90-272-9280-9
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNINA-9910782045703321
Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : J. Benjamins, c2006
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Advances in functional linguistics : Columbia School beyond its origins / / edited by Joseph Davis, Radmila J. Gorup, Nancy Stern
Advances in functional linguistics : Columbia School beyond its origins / / edited by Joseph Davis, Radmila J. Gorup, Nancy Stern
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : J. Benjamins, c2006
Descrizione fisica x, 344 p
Disciplina 410.1/8
Altri autori (Persone) DavisJoseph <1958->
GorupRadmila Jovanovic
SternNancy <1959->
Collana Studies in functional and structural linguistics
Soggetto topico Functionalism (Linguistics)
ISBN 1-282-15492-3
9786612154928
90-272-9280-9
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Advances in Functional Linguistics -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- List of Contributors -- Consistency and change in Columbia School linguistics -- 1. This volume and its predecessors -- 1.1 Meaning as explanation: Advances in linguistic sign theory (1995) -- 1.1.1 Connections to the present volume -- 1.2 Signal, meaning, and message: Perspectives on sign-based linguistics (2002) -- 1.2.1 Connections to the present volume -- 1.3 Cognitive and communicative approaches to linguistic analysis (2004) -- 1.3.1 Connections to the present volume -- 2. Consistency in Columbia School linguistics -- 3. Change in Columbia School linguistics -- Notes -- References -- Columbia School and Saussure's langue -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Langage, langue and parole -- 3. Criticisms of langue -- 4. Features of Saussure's langue -- 5. Grammatical systems -- 6. Diver's revision of Saussure's langue -- 7. Columbia School's Saussurean heritage -- 8. Langue as the object of study -- 9. 'La langue is a form, not a substance' -- 10. The non-discreteness of thought and sound -- 11. Saussure's anti-nomenclaturism -- 12. Columbia School linguistic structure -- 13. Evaluation -- 14. Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Diver's Theory -- 1. Diver '95: The Main Idea -- 2. The search for the starting-point of linguistics -- 3. Columbia School distinguished from other sign-oriented schools -- 4. Diver '95 and explanation in science -- 5. Linguistic sign theory versus Columbia School -- Notes -- References -- Phonology as human behavior -- 1. The theory: Phonology as human behavior (PHB) -- 1.1 The four orientations underlying the theory of PHB -- 1.2 Viewing phonetics/phonology as human behavior -- 1.3 The fundamental analytic position of PHB -- 2. Quantitative results and principles obtained from the theory.
3. Developmental and clinical phonology: Natural phonology vs. PHB -- 4. PHB: From phonology to the lexicon -- 5. PHB: From phonology to morphology -- 5.1 Inflectional systems in English -- 5.2 Modern English -- 5.3 Old English -- 5.4 Middle English -- 5.5 From Proto-Indo-European to Proto-Germanic to Old English -- 6. Summary and conclusions -- Notes -- References -- Phonological processes of Japanese based on the theory of phonology as human behavior -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The theory of phonology as human behavior -- 2.1 General concepts of PHB related to phonological processes -- 2.2 Principles of PHB -- 3. Aphasia and PHB -- 3.1 Japanese speech errors based on PHB -- 3.2. Results and discussion -- 4. Japanese loanwords within PHB -- 4.1 Sound alternation -- 4.2 Resolving consonant clusters -- 4.3 Deletion processes in loanwords -- 4.3.1 Deletion of final consonants -- 4.3.2 Deletion of word-final syllables -- 4.3.3 Deletion of suffixes and articles -- 4.3.4 Deletion of word-initial position -- 4.3.5 Deletion in compound words -- 5. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Phonology as human behavior -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Traditional phonemic inventory of Byelorussian -- 3. The analysis -- 4. Phonemes of constriction in Byelorussian -- 4.1 Stable versus mobile: Likes are favored -- 4.2 Maximal constriction is favored -- 4.3 Initial visible articulations are favored -- 4.4 Final apical articulations are favored -- 4.5 Additional articulators are disfavored -- 4.5.1 One articulator (voiceless) is favored -- two articulators (voiced) are disfavored -- 4.5.2 One articulator in final position is favored -- 4.5.3 Coordination of different activities (voicing and nasality) is disfavored -- 4.5.4 Palatalization is disfavored.
4.6 Additional gesture is disfavored: Transitions from one distinct constriction to another within a single phoneme are disfavored -- 4.7 Reuse of the same musculature is disfavored -- 5. Summary and conclusions -- Notes -- References -- Dictionaries -- Phonology as human behavior -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The data and procedure -- 3. Complexity of articulation -- 4. The Visibility Hypothesis -- 5. The problem -- 6. Discussion -- 7. Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Functional motivations for the sound patterns of English non-lexical interjections -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Non-lexical interjections in contemporary linguistics -- 3. The phonology of non-lexical interjections -- 4. Interjection sound patterns: The hypotheses -- 5. DiSPEL (DIScourse Particle Expert modeL): A functional taxonomy -- 6. The corpora: Choosing and post-coding -- 7. Markedness and unmarkedness -- 8. Results -- 9. Interjections in the HCRC Map Task corpus -- 10. Conclusions -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Phonology without the phoneme -- 1. The phoneme in Diver and Columbia School -- 2. The phoneme defined -- 3. Analytical difficulties with the phoneme -- 4. Diver's theoretical justification for the phoneme -- 5. The theoretical justification questioned -- 6. Columbia School phonology without the phoneme -- Notes -- References -- Tell me about yourself -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Traditional account of -self pronouns -- 3. Reflecting on reflexivity -- 4. A new look at the data -- 4.1 Contrast/Comparison -- 4.2 Exclusion -- 4.3 Unexpected Messages -- 4.4 Importance of the referent -- 4.5 Overlapping message effects -- 4.6 Role conflicts -- 5. A meaning hypothesis -- 5.1 Picture noun phrases -- 5.2 Logophoric expressions -- 5.3 Conjoined expressions -- 6. Summary -- Acknowledgements -- Notes -- Data Sources -- References -- Se without deixis -- 1. Introduction.
2. Neutralization of the substances Number, Gender and Discourse Referent -- 3. Neutralization of Control -- 4. Human referent of se and inferring Control -- 5. Two-participant messages with se -- Notes -- Data Sources -- References -- The difference between zero and nothing -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Morphological background -- 3. Historical background -- 4. Arguments for and against a separable prefix for Cl. 9-10 -- 5. Further arguments against a separable prefix for Cl. 9/10 -- 6. Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- A semantic analysis of the Swahili suffix li -- 1. A new analysis of li -- 2. Generative and traditional treatments enumerate uses of li -- 3. Our hypothesis -- 3.1 Meanings of the Control System -- 3.2 An illustration: 'pick up and carry' vs. 'deal with' -- 4. Li is a signal of a unitary meaning -- 5. Double-li supports the Control hypothesis -- 6. Many usage categories are but manifestations of the single li -- 7. Meaning vs. message -- Notes -- Data Sources -- References -- The structure of the Japanese inferential system -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Previous studies and problems -- 2.1 Previous research -- 2.2 Further counter-examples to the evidentiality approach -- 2.2.1 Rashii and yooda -- 2.2.2 Daroo and soo-da -- 3. A sign-based hypothesis -- 3.1 Theoretical preliminaries -- 3.2 A sign-based hypothesis -- 4. Testing the hypothesis -- 4.1 Data analysis -- 4.2 Inference established: rashii vs. yooda -- 4.3 Inference non-established: daroo vs. soo-da -- 4.3.1 Daroo: Inference non-established - High Focus -- 4.3.2 Soo-da: inference non-established - low focus -- 5. Conclusion -- Notes -- Abbreviations -- Data Sources -- References -- Structuring cues of conjunctive yet, but, and still -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Research background -- 3. Hypotheses -- 3.1 But: The override effect -- 3.2 Yet: A thematically important contrast.
3.3 Still: Reconnecting with earlier information -- 4. Predictions -- 5. Data -- 6. Analytical tool -- 7. Results -- 8. Conclusion -- Notes -- Data Sources -- References -- The case for articulatory gestures - not sounds - as the physical embodiment of speech signs -- 1. Introduction -- 2.1 The nature of gesture -- 2.2 Other definitions of gesture -- 2.3 The gesture as a sign -- 2.3.1 Specialization -- 3. Semiotics and theoretical methods -- 3.1 Linguists' acoustical views of speech signs -- 3.2 Symbols vs. stimuli vs. signals -- 3.3 Hockett's dimensions -- 4. Discreteness vs. continuity -- 5. Channel -- 5.1 Lip reading -- 5.2 Feedback mechanisms -- 5.3 Multisensory perception -- 6. Transmission and reception -- 6.1 Sound production vs. sound modification -- 6.2 The spatial configuration of the speech chain -- 6.3 Dimensionality / double articulation -- 6.4 Distortion -- 6.4.1 Spectrogram variation -- 6.4.2 Ambiguity -- 6.4.3 Vocal cord variation -- 6.4.4 Gestural overlap -- 6.4.5 Inter-speaker variation -- 6.4.6 Summary of distortion -- 7. Speech production -- 8. Speech perception -- 9. Interchangeability and replicability -- 10. Language Acquisition -- 11. Iconicity -- 12. Language evolution -- 13. Summary -- Notes -- References -- Meaning in nonlinguistic systems -- 1. Background: Data collection and description -- 2. Food as an instance of l'arbitraire du signe -- 2.1 The identity of food is arbitrary -- 2.2 The perception and categorization of food is arbitrary -- 2.3 The meaning of food is arbitrary -- 2.4 Foods as evidence of otherness -- 2.5 The changing value of food -- 3. The Swahili and Lamu town -- 3.1 Swahili society and the path to heshima -- 3.2 Food and drink behavior along the public-private continuum -- 3.3 The street scene -- 3.4 The upper class and travelers -- 4. Analysis -- 5. Discussion.
5.1 If eating is inherently intimate, how can food be arbitrary?.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910821731703321
Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : J. Benjamins, c2006
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Language [[electronic resource] ] : communication and human behavior : the linguistic essays of William Diver / / edited, annotated, augmented, and with introductions by Alan Huffman, Joseph Davis
Language [[electronic resource] ] : communication and human behavior : the linguistic essays of William Diver / / edited, annotated, augmented, and with introductions by Alan Huffman, Joseph Davis
Autore Diver William <1921-1995.>
Pubbl/distr/stampa Leiden ; ; Boston, : Brill, 2011
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (574 p.)
Disciplina 410
410.18
Altri autori (Persone) HuffmanAlan <1948->
DavisJoseph <1958->
Collana Brill eBook titles
Soggetto topico Psycholinguistics
Communication
Cognitive grammar
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 1-283-31061-9
9786613310613
90-04-20910-7
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto pt. 1. Introduction to Diver's thought -- pt. 2. Greek -- pt. 3. Latin -- pt. 4. Phonology -- pt. 5. Linguistic theories.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910457404403321
Diver William <1921-1995.>  
Leiden ; ; Boston, : Brill, 2011
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Language [[electronic resource] ] : communication and human behavior : the linguistic essays of William Diver / / edited, annotated, augmented, and with introductions by Alan Huffman, Joseph Davis
Language [[electronic resource] ] : communication and human behavior : the linguistic essays of William Diver / / edited, annotated, augmented, and with introductions by Alan Huffman, Joseph Davis
Autore Diver William <1921-1995.>
Pubbl/distr/stampa Leiden ; ; Boston, : Brill, 2011
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (574 p.)
Disciplina 410
410.18
Altri autori (Persone) HuffmanAlan <1948->
DavisJoseph <1958->
Collana Brill eBook titles
Soggetto topico Psycholinguistics
Communication
Cognitive grammar
ISBN 1-283-31061-9
9786613310613
90-04-20910-7
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto pt. 1. Introduction to Diver's thought -- pt. 2. Greek -- pt. 3. Latin -- pt. 4. Phonology -- pt. 5. Linguistic theories.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910781948503321
Diver William <1921-1995.>  
Leiden ; ; Boston, : Brill, 2011
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Language [[electronic resource] ] : communication and human behavior : the linguistic essays of William Diver / / edited, annotated, augmented, and with introductions by Alan Huffman, Joseph Davis
Language [[electronic resource] ] : communication and human behavior : the linguistic essays of William Diver / / edited, annotated, augmented, and with introductions by Alan Huffman, Joseph Davis
Autore Diver William <1921-1995.>
Pubbl/distr/stampa Leiden ; ; Boston, : Brill, 2011
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (574 p.)
Disciplina 410
410.18
Altri autori (Persone) HuffmanAlan <1948->
DavisJoseph <1958->
Collana Brill eBook titles
Soggetto topico Psycholinguistics
Communication
Cognitive grammar
ISBN 1-283-31061-9
9786613310613
90-04-20910-7
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto pt. 1. Introduction to Diver's thought -- pt. 2. Greek -- pt. 3. Latin -- pt. 4. Phonology -- pt. 5. Linguistic theories.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910823073603321
Diver William <1921-1995.>  
Leiden ; ; Boston, : Brill, 2011
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui