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Comparative studies in early Germanic languages : with a focus on verbal categories / / edited by Gabriele Diewald, Leibniz University Hannover ; Leena Kahlas-Tarkka, University of Helsinki ; Ilse Wischer, University of Potsdam
Comparative studies in early Germanic languages : with a focus on verbal categories / / edited by Gabriele Diewald, Leibniz University Hannover ; Leena Kahlas-Tarkka, University of Helsinki ; Ilse Wischer, University of Potsdam
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , 2013
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (324 p.)
Disciplina 429/.56
Altri autori (Persone) DiewaldGabriele
Kahlas-TarkkaLeena
WischerIlse <1959->
Collana Studies in language companion series
Soggetto topico English language - Grammar, Comparative
English language - Grammar, Historical
Germanic languages - Grammar, Comparative
Germanic languages - Grammar, Historical
Grammar, Comparative and general - Grammaticalization
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 90-272-7145-3
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Comparative Studies in Early Germanic Languages; Editorial page; Title page; LCC page; Table of contents; Introduction; 1. Verbal categories and their diachronic development in Old English and Old High German; 2. Grammaticalisation, comparative diachronic linguistics and socio-cultural/philological aspects; 3. Historical comparative corpus studies; 4. The verbal categories studied in this volume; 5. Summary and outlook; References; *haitan in Gothic and Old English; 1. Introduction; 2. Methodology; 2.1 Corpora and data collection; 3. Results
3.1 Functions of Gothic haitan and Old English hātan3.1.1 Gothic; 3.1.2 Early Old English; 3.1.3 Late Old English; 3.1.4 Comparison of Gothic and Early and Late Old English; 3.2 Competitors of haitan in Gothic; 4. Discussion and conclusion; Appendix; Early Old English Texts; Late Old English Texts; References; Incipient Grammaticalisation; 1. Introduction; 2. Problems with the traditional view of an Old High German and Old English passive; 2.1 Old High German; 2.2 Old English; 3. Theoretical considerations for the interpretation of constructions with the past participle in English and German
3.1 The copulas: OHG sīn/wesan and werdan, OE s-copula and weorðan3.2 Past participle; 3.3 Constructions with the past participle; 3.3.1 Constructions with stative copula: Sīn/wesan, s-copula plus past participle; 3.2.2 Constructions with inchoative copula: Werdan/weorðan plus past participle; 4. Considerations about different incipient stages of grammaticalisation of "passive" constructions in Late Old English and Old High German; 5. Conclusion and further research; References; Passive auxiliaries in English and German; 1. Introduction; 2. Previous studies; 2.1 Old English
2.2 Old High German3. A different approach: Constructional environments; 4. Bounded and unbounded language use; 4.1 Status in Present Day English and New High German; 4.2 The bounded system of Old English and its breakdown; 4.3 The bounded system of German and its grammaticalisation; 5. Convergence and divergence in the development of the English and German passive; 5.1 Introduction; 5.2 Corpora and data; 5.3 Clause type; 5.4 Time adverbs; 5.5 Word order; 6. Conclusion; References; Causative habban in Old English; 1. Introduction; 1.1 The structure of the paper; 1.2 The construction
1.3 The corpus studied 1.4 The causative habban instances; 1.5 Previous studies; 2. Discussion; 2.1 Diachronic and dialectal breakdown; 2.2 Syntactic properties of causative habban constructions; 2.3 Semantic properties of causative habban constructions; 2.4 An analysis of the OE instances listed as causative in Section 1.3; 2.5 A hypothesis concerning the rise of causative habban; 2.6 The triggering of the grammaticalisation process: the rise of causative habban in the light of Diewald's context-sensitive grammaticalisation scenario; 3. Final remarks; References; Remembering ( ge)munan
1. Introduction
Record Nr. UNINA-9910452408103321
Amsterdam : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , 2013
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Comparative studies in early Germanic languages : with a focus on verbal categories / / edited by Gabriele Diewald, Leibniz University Hannover ; Leena Kahlas-Tarkka, University of Helsinki ; Ilse Wischer, University of Potsdam
Comparative studies in early Germanic languages : with a focus on verbal categories / / edited by Gabriele Diewald, Leibniz University Hannover ; Leena Kahlas-Tarkka, University of Helsinki ; Ilse Wischer, University of Potsdam
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , 2013
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (324 p.)
Disciplina 429/.56
Altri autori (Persone) DiewaldGabriele
Kahlas-TarkkaLeena
WischerIlse <1959->
Collana Studies in language companion series
Soggetto topico English language - Grammar, Comparative
English language - Grammar, Historical
Germanic languages - Grammar, Comparative
Germanic languages - Grammar, Historical
Grammar, Comparative and general - Grammaticalization
ISBN 90-272-7145-3
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Comparative Studies in Early Germanic Languages; Editorial page; Title page; LCC page; Table of contents; Introduction; 1. Verbal categories and their diachronic development in Old English and Old High German; 2. Grammaticalisation, comparative diachronic linguistics and socio-cultural/philological aspects; 3. Historical comparative corpus studies; 4. The verbal categories studied in this volume; 5. Summary and outlook; References; *haitan in Gothic and Old English; 1. Introduction; 2. Methodology; 2.1 Corpora and data collection; 3. Results
3.1 Functions of Gothic haitan and Old English hātan3.1.1 Gothic; 3.1.2 Early Old English; 3.1.3 Late Old English; 3.1.4 Comparison of Gothic and Early and Late Old English; 3.2 Competitors of haitan in Gothic; 4. Discussion and conclusion; Appendix; Early Old English Texts; Late Old English Texts; References; Incipient Grammaticalisation; 1. Introduction; 2. Problems with the traditional view of an Old High German and Old English passive; 2.1 Old High German; 2.2 Old English; 3. Theoretical considerations for the interpretation of constructions with the past participle in English and German
3.1 The copulas: OHG sīn/wesan and werdan, OE s-copula and weorðan3.2 Past participle; 3.3 Constructions with the past participle; 3.3.1 Constructions with stative copula: Sīn/wesan, s-copula plus past participle; 3.2.2 Constructions with inchoative copula: Werdan/weorðan plus past participle; 4. Considerations about different incipient stages of grammaticalisation of "passive" constructions in Late Old English and Old High German; 5. Conclusion and further research; References; Passive auxiliaries in English and German; 1. Introduction; 2. Previous studies; 2.1 Old English
2.2 Old High German3. A different approach: Constructional environments; 4. Bounded and unbounded language use; 4.1 Status in Present Day English and New High German; 4.2 The bounded system of Old English and its breakdown; 4.3 The bounded system of German and its grammaticalisation; 5. Convergence and divergence in the development of the English and German passive; 5.1 Introduction; 5.2 Corpora and data; 5.3 Clause type; 5.4 Time adverbs; 5.5 Word order; 6. Conclusion; References; Causative habban in Old English; 1. Introduction; 1.1 The structure of the paper; 1.2 The construction
1.3 The corpus studied 1.4 The causative habban instances; 1.5 Previous studies; 2. Discussion; 2.1 Diachronic and dialectal breakdown; 2.2 Syntactic properties of causative habban constructions; 2.3 Semantic properties of causative habban constructions; 2.4 An analysis of the OE instances listed as causative in Section 1.3; 2.5 A hypothesis concerning the rise of causative habban; 2.6 The triggering of the grammaticalisation process: the rise of causative habban in the light of Diewald's context-sensitive grammaticalisation scenario; 3. Final remarks; References; Remembering ( ge)munan
1. Introduction
Record Nr. UNINA-9910790691803321
Amsterdam : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , 2013
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Comparative studies in early Germanic languages : with a focus on verbal categories / / edited by Gabriele Diewald, Leibniz University Hannover ; Leena Kahlas-Tarkka, University of Helsinki ; Ilse Wischer, University of Potsdam
Comparative studies in early Germanic languages : with a focus on verbal categories / / edited by Gabriele Diewald, Leibniz University Hannover ; Leena Kahlas-Tarkka, University of Helsinki ; Ilse Wischer, University of Potsdam
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , 2013
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (324 p.)
Disciplina 429/.56
Altri autori (Persone) DiewaldGabriele
Kahlas-TarkkaLeena
WischerIlse <1959->
Collana Studies in language companion series
Soggetto topico English language - Grammar, Comparative
English language - Grammar, Historical
Germanic languages - Grammar, Comparative
Germanic languages - Grammar, Historical
Grammar, Comparative and general - Grammaticalization
ISBN 90-272-7145-3
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Comparative Studies in Early Germanic Languages; Editorial page; Title page; LCC page; Table of contents; Introduction; 1. Verbal categories and their diachronic development in Old English and Old High German; 2. Grammaticalisation, comparative diachronic linguistics and socio-cultural/philological aspects; 3. Historical comparative corpus studies; 4. The verbal categories studied in this volume; 5. Summary and outlook; References; *haitan in Gothic and Old English; 1. Introduction; 2. Methodology; 2.1 Corpora and data collection; 3. Results
3.1 Functions of Gothic haitan and Old English hātan3.1.1 Gothic; 3.1.2 Early Old English; 3.1.3 Late Old English; 3.1.4 Comparison of Gothic and Early and Late Old English; 3.2 Competitors of haitan in Gothic; 4. Discussion and conclusion; Appendix; Early Old English Texts; Late Old English Texts; References; Incipient Grammaticalisation; 1. Introduction; 2. Problems with the traditional view of an Old High German and Old English passive; 2.1 Old High German; 2.2 Old English; 3. Theoretical considerations for the interpretation of constructions with the past participle in English and German
3.1 The copulas: OHG sīn/wesan and werdan, OE s-copula and weorðan3.2 Past participle; 3.3 Constructions with the past participle; 3.3.1 Constructions with stative copula: Sīn/wesan, s-copula plus past participle; 3.2.2 Constructions with inchoative copula: Werdan/weorðan plus past participle; 4. Considerations about different incipient stages of grammaticalisation of "passive" constructions in Late Old English and Old High German; 5. Conclusion and further research; References; Passive auxiliaries in English and German; 1. Introduction; 2. Previous studies; 2.1 Old English
2.2 Old High German3. A different approach: Constructional environments; 4. Bounded and unbounded language use; 4.1 Status in Present Day English and New High German; 4.2 The bounded system of Old English and its breakdown; 4.3 The bounded system of German and its grammaticalisation; 5. Convergence and divergence in the development of the English and German passive; 5.1 Introduction; 5.2 Corpora and data; 5.3 Clause type; 5.4 Time adverbs; 5.5 Word order; 6. Conclusion; References; Causative habban in Old English; 1. Introduction; 1.1 The structure of the paper; 1.2 The construction
1.3 The corpus studied 1.4 The causative habban instances; 1.5 Previous studies; 2. Discussion; 2.1 Diachronic and dialectal breakdown; 2.2 Syntactic properties of causative habban constructions; 2.3 Semantic properties of causative habban constructions; 2.4 An analysis of the OE instances listed as causative in Section 1.3; 2.5 A hypothesis concerning the rise of causative habban; 2.6 The triggering of the grammaticalisation process: the rise of causative habban in the light of Diewald's context-sensitive grammaticalisation scenario; 3. Final remarks; References; Remembering ( ge)munan
1. Introduction
Record Nr. UNINA-9910811145903321
Amsterdam : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , 2013
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Language periphery : monocollocable words in English, Italian, German and Czech / / compiled and edited by František Čermák [and three others]
Language periphery : monocollocable words in English, Italian, German and Czech / / compiled and edited by František Čermák [and three others]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam, [Netherlands] ; ; Philadelphia, [Philadelphia] : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , 2016
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (116 p.)
Disciplina 415/.9
Collana Studies in Corpus Linguistics (SCL)
Soggetto topico Sublanguage - Lexicography
Lexicology
Italian language - Lexicology
German language - Lexicology
Czech language - Lexicology
English language - Grammar, Comparative
Italian language - Grammar, Comparative
German language - Grammar, Comparative
Czech language - Grammar, Comparative
Dictionaries, Polyglot
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto 2. Identificazione delle PM3. Struttura delle voci nei dizionari; 4. Problemi della selezione manuale; 5. Limiti e uso; Monokollokabilität aus korpuslinguistischer Sicht; 1. Zum Begriff der Monokollokabilität; 2. Zur Bearbeitung der monokollokabilen Wörter und zur Struktur der Verzeichnisse; 3. Aufgefundene Strukturen; 4. Anregungen für Forschung und lexikographische Umsetzung; 5. Ausblick; Monocollocable words in English; 1. Definition; 2. Corpus sample, its nature and limitations; 3. The format of the lists; 4. The English monocollocable lists; 5. Suggestions for further research
A frequency dictionary of Czech monocollocable wordsA frequency dictionary of Italian monocollocable words; A frequency dictionary of German monocollocable words; A frequency dictionary of English monocollocable words; An alphabetical dictionary of Czech Monocollocable Words; An alphabetical dictionary of Italian monocollocable words; An alphabetical dictionary of German monocollocable words; An alphabetical dictionary of English monocollocable words; References; Corpora
Record Nr. UNINA-9910466153603321
Amsterdam, [Netherlands] ; ; Philadelphia, [Philadelphia] : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , 2016
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Language periphery : monocollocable words in English, Italian, German and Czech / / compiled and edited by František Čermák [and three others]
Language periphery : monocollocable words in English, Italian, German and Czech / / compiled and edited by František Čermák [and three others]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam, [Netherlands] ; ; Philadelphia, [Philadelphia] : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , 2016
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (116 p.)
Disciplina 415/.9
Collana Studies in Corpus Linguistics (SCL)
Soggetto topico Sublanguage - Lexicography
Lexicology
Italian language - Lexicology
German language - Lexicology
Czech language - Lexicology
English language - Grammar, Comparative
Italian language - Grammar, Comparative
German language - Grammar, Comparative
Czech language - Grammar, Comparative
Dictionaries, Polyglot
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto 2. Identificazione delle PM3. Struttura delle voci nei dizionari; 4. Problemi della selezione manuale; 5. Limiti e uso; Monokollokabilität aus korpuslinguistischer Sicht; 1. Zum Begriff der Monokollokabilität; 2. Zur Bearbeitung der monokollokabilen Wörter und zur Struktur der Verzeichnisse; 3. Aufgefundene Strukturen; 4. Anregungen für Forschung und lexikographische Umsetzung; 5. Ausblick; Monocollocable words in English; 1. Definition; 2. Corpus sample, its nature and limitations; 3. The format of the lists; 4. The English monocollocable lists; 5. Suggestions for further research
A frequency dictionary of Czech monocollocable wordsA frequency dictionary of Italian monocollocable words; A frequency dictionary of German monocollocable words; A frequency dictionary of English monocollocable words; An alphabetical dictionary of Czech Monocollocable Words; An alphabetical dictionary of Italian monocollocable words; An alphabetical dictionary of German monocollocable words; An alphabetical dictionary of English monocollocable words; References; Corpora
Record Nr. UNINA-9910798013603321
Amsterdam, [Netherlands] ; ; Philadelphia, [Philadelphia] : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , 2016
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Language periphery : monocollocable words in English, Italian, German and Czech / / compiled and edited by František Čermák [and three others]
Language periphery : monocollocable words in English, Italian, German and Czech / / compiled and edited by František Čermák [and three others]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam, [Netherlands] ; ; Philadelphia, [Philadelphia] : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , 2016
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (116 p.)
Disciplina 415/.9
Collana Studies in Corpus Linguistics (SCL)
Soggetto topico Sublanguage - Lexicography
Lexicology
Italian language - Lexicology
German language - Lexicology
Czech language - Lexicology
English language - Grammar, Comparative
Italian language - Grammar, Comparative
German language - Grammar, Comparative
Czech language - Grammar, Comparative
Dictionaries, Polyglot
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto 2. Identificazione delle PM3. Struttura delle voci nei dizionari; 4. Problemi della selezione manuale; 5. Limiti e uso; Monokollokabilität aus korpuslinguistischer Sicht; 1. Zum Begriff der Monokollokabilität; 2. Zur Bearbeitung der monokollokabilen Wörter und zur Struktur der Verzeichnisse; 3. Aufgefundene Strukturen; 4. Anregungen für Forschung und lexikographische Umsetzung; 5. Ausblick; Monocollocable words in English; 1. Definition; 2. Corpus sample, its nature and limitations; 3. The format of the lists; 4. The English monocollocable lists; 5. Suggestions for further research
A frequency dictionary of Czech monocollocable wordsA frequency dictionary of Italian monocollocable words; A frequency dictionary of German monocollocable words; A frequency dictionary of English monocollocable words; An alphabetical dictionary of Czech Monocollocable Words; An alphabetical dictionary of Italian monocollocable words; An alphabetical dictionary of German monocollocable words; An alphabetical dictionary of English monocollocable words; References; Corpora
Record Nr. UNINA-9910828683703321
Amsterdam, [Netherlands] ; ; Philadelphia, [Philadelphia] : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , 2016
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
On the grammar of optative constructions [[electronic resource] /] / Patrick Georg Grosz
On the grammar of optative constructions [[electronic resource] /] / Patrick Georg Grosz
Autore Grosz Patrick Georg
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : John Benjamins Pub. Co., 2012
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (358 p.)
Disciplina 415/.6
Collana Linguistik aktuell/linguistics today (la)
Soggetto topico Grammar, Comparative and general - Mood
Grammar, Comparative and general - Subordinate constructions
Grammar, Comparative and general - Subjunctive
Grammar, Comparative and general - Tense
English language - Grammar, Comparative
German language - Grammar, Comparative
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 1-283-53946-2
9786613851918
90-272-7345-6
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto On the Grammar of Optative Constructions; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; Acknowledgments; Abbreviations; Introduction; Prolegomena; 2.1 Optatives - definitions and illustrations; 2.1.1 Optative basics: Introducing if-, that- and V1-optatives; 2.1.2 If-optatives are not optative conditionals; 2.1.3 Cautionary remarks on optative mood and clause type; 2.1.4 Interim summary and terminological clarifications; 2.2 Dispelling the idiom hypothesis; 2.3 The next of kin - introducing polar exclamatives; 2.4 Interim summary; The core analysis
3.1 The EX-Op analysis: A bird's-eye view3.1.1 The aim of this project; 3.1.2 The system in a nutshell; 3.1.3 On the cognition-emotion dichotomy; 3.1.4 The views of others: How to classify this type of analysis; 3.2 The EX-Op analysis: A worm's-eye view; 3.2.1 In a nutshell; 3.2.2 Introducing EX; 3.2.3 The role of particles in exclamations; 3.2.4 The role of mood in exclamations; 3.3 Summary and road map; The source of desirability in optatives; 4.1 On expressing emotion, EX and generalized exclamations; 4.1.1 The core puzzle: Attitudes without attitude predicates; 4.1.2 Core proposal
4.1.3 Optative clauses behave like complement clauses4.1.3.1 On polarity in optatives; 4.1.3.2 On inversion in optatives; 4.1.3.3 On morphological tense and mood in optatives; 4.1.3.4 On the range of functions for EX-utterances; 4.1.3.5 Interim summary; 4.1.4 Optative clauses do not involve matrix clause deletion; 4.1.4.1 The core argument against matrix clause deletion; 4.1.4.2 Scholz's evidence against matrix clause deletion; 4.1.4.3 Rifkin's evidence against matrix clause deletion; 4.1.4.4 Interim summary; 4.1.5 Introducing EX - An emotive operator; 4.1.6 The EX operator is expressive
4.1.6.1 On the non-truth-functionality of exclamations4.1.6.2 Non-embeddability: A hallmark of expressive content and exclamations; 4.1.6.3 A brief review of other markers of expressive meaning; 4.1.7 The EX operator is scalar; 4.1.8 On the role of interjections and other prototypical elements; 4.1.9 Formal matters: What is in EX and what isn't; 4.1.10 Two types of optatives: EX-optatives and Adv-optatives; 4.1.11 Summary; 4.2 An alternative: Deriving desirability from the pragmatics; 4.2.1 Biezma (2011ab) in a nutshell; 4.2.2 Are optatives conditionals?
4.2.3 Do optatives involve reversed topicality?4.2.4 Can we derive desirability from the discourse?; On the role of mood in exclamations; 5.1 The core proposal: Connecting V to C via mood; 5.1.1 Two puzzles; 5.1.2 One solution (in a nutshell); 5.1.3 A split mood realization system in German exclamations; 5.1.4 Generalized split-TAM; 5.1.5 Syntactic implementation - on mood movement and V1; 5.1.6 On the content of C; 5.1.7 Interim summary; 5.2 Mood selection; 5.2.1 Out in the optative left field: An apparent selection problem; 5.2.2 Towards a solution
5.3 Mood, exclamations and the connection to verb second
Record Nr. UNINA-9910465417303321
Grosz Patrick Georg  
Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : John Benjamins Pub. Co., 2012
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
On the grammar of optative constructions [[electronic resource] /] / Patrick Georg Grosz
On the grammar of optative constructions [[electronic resource] /] / Patrick Georg Grosz
Autore Grosz Patrick Georg
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : John Benjamins Pub. Co., 2012
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (358 p.)
Disciplina 415/.6
Collana Linguistik aktuell/linguistics today (la)
Soggetto topico Grammar, Comparative and general - Mood
Grammar, Comparative and general - Subordinate constructions
Grammar, Comparative and general - Subjunctive
Grammar, Comparative and general - Tense
English language - Grammar, Comparative
German language - Grammar, Comparative
ISBN 1-283-53946-2
9786613851918
90-272-7345-6
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto On the Grammar of Optative Constructions; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; Acknowledgments; Abbreviations; Introduction; Prolegomena; 2.1 Optatives - definitions and illustrations; 2.1.1 Optative basics: Introducing if-, that- and V1-optatives; 2.1.2 If-optatives are not optative conditionals; 2.1.3 Cautionary remarks on optative mood and clause type; 2.1.4 Interim summary and terminological clarifications; 2.2 Dispelling the idiom hypothesis; 2.3 The next of kin - introducing polar exclamatives; 2.4 Interim summary; The core analysis
3.1 The EX-Op analysis: A bird's-eye view3.1.1 The aim of this project; 3.1.2 The system in a nutshell; 3.1.3 On the cognition-emotion dichotomy; 3.1.4 The views of others: How to classify this type of analysis; 3.2 The EX-Op analysis: A worm's-eye view; 3.2.1 In a nutshell; 3.2.2 Introducing EX; 3.2.3 The role of particles in exclamations; 3.2.4 The role of mood in exclamations; 3.3 Summary and road map; The source of desirability in optatives; 4.1 On expressing emotion, EX and generalized exclamations; 4.1.1 The core puzzle: Attitudes without attitude predicates; 4.1.2 Core proposal
4.1.3 Optative clauses behave like complement clauses4.1.3.1 On polarity in optatives; 4.1.3.2 On inversion in optatives; 4.1.3.3 On morphological tense and mood in optatives; 4.1.3.4 On the range of functions for EX-utterances; 4.1.3.5 Interim summary; 4.1.4 Optative clauses do not involve matrix clause deletion; 4.1.4.1 The core argument against matrix clause deletion; 4.1.4.2 Scholz's evidence against matrix clause deletion; 4.1.4.3 Rifkin's evidence against matrix clause deletion; 4.1.4.4 Interim summary; 4.1.5 Introducing EX - An emotive operator; 4.1.6 The EX operator is expressive
4.1.6.1 On the non-truth-functionality of exclamations4.1.6.2 Non-embeddability: A hallmark of expressive content and exclamations; 4.1.6.3 A brief review of other markers of expressive meaning; 4.1.7 The EX operator is scalar; 4.1.8 On the role of interjections and other prototypical elements; 4.1.9 Formal matters: What is in EX and what isn't; 4.1.10 Two types of optatives: EX-optatives and Adv-optatives; 4.1.11 Summary; 4.2 An alternative: Deriving desirability from the pragmatics; 4.2.1 Biezma (2011ab) in a nutshell; 4.2.2 Are optatives conditionals?
4.2.3 Do optatives involve reversed topicality?4.2.4 Can we derive desirability from the discourse?; On the role of mood in exclamations; 5.1 The core proposal: Connecting V to C via mood; 5.1.1 Two puzzles; 5.1.2 One solution (in a nutshell); 5.1.3 A split mood realization system in German exclamations; 5.1.4 Generalized split-TAM; 5.1.5 Syntactic implementation - on mood movement and V1; 5.1.6 On the content of C; 5.1.7 Interim summary; 5.2 Mood selection; 5.2.1 Out in the optative left field: An apparent selection problem; 5.2.2 Towards a solution
5.3 Mood, exclamations and the connection to verb second
Record Nr. UNINA-9910791908103321
Grosz Patrick Georg  
Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : John Benjamins Pub. Co., 2012
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
On the grammar of optative constructions / / Patrick Georg Grosz
On the grammar of optative constructions / / Patrick Georg Grosz
Autore Grosz Patrick Georg
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : John Benjamins Pub. Co., 2012
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (358 p.)
Disciplina 415/.6
Collana Linguistik aktuell/linguistics today (la)
Soggetto topico Grammar, Comparative and general - Mood
Grammar, Comparative and general - Subordinate constructions
Grammar, Comparative and general - Subjunctive
Grammar, Comparative and general - Tense
English language - Grammar, Comparative
German language - Grammar, Comparative
ISBN 1-283-53946-2
9786613851918
90-272-7345-6
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto On the Grammar of Optative Constructions; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; Acknowledgments; Abbreviations; Introduction; Prolegomena; 2.1 Optatives - definitions and illustrations; 2.1.1 Optative basics: Introducing if-, that- and V1-optatives; 2.1.2 If-optatives are not optative conditionals; 2.1.3 Cautionary remarks on optative mood and clause type; 2.1.4 Interim summary and terminological clarifications; 2.2 Dispelling the idiom hypothesis; 2.3 The next of kin - introducing polar exclamatives; 2.4 Interim summary; The core analysis
3.1 The EX-Op analysis: A bird's-eye view3.1.1 The aim of this project; 3.1.2 The system in a nutshell; 3.1.3 On the cognition-emotion dichotomy; 3.1.4 The views of others: How to classify this type of analysis; 3.2 The EX-Op analysis: A worm's-eye view; 3.2.1 In a nutshell; 3.2.2 Introducing EX; 3.2.3 The role of particles in exclamations; 3.2.4 The role of mood in exclamations; 3.3 Summary and road map; The source of desirability in optatives; 4.1 On expressing emotion, EX and generalized exclamations; 4.1.1 The core puzzle: Attitudes without attitude predicates; 4.1.2 Core proposal
4.1.3 Optative clauses behave like complement clauses4.1.3.1 On polarity in optatives; 4.1.3.2 On inversion in optatives; 4.1.3.3 On morphological tense and mood in optatives; 4.1.3.4 On the range of functions for EX-utterances; 4.1.3.5 Interim summary; 4.1.4 Optative clauses do not involve matrix clause deletion; 4.1.4.1 The core argument against matrix clause deletion; 4.1.4.2 Scholz's evidence against matrix clause deletion; 4.1.4.3 Rifkin's evidence against matrix clause deletion; 4.1.4.4 Interim summary; 4.1.5 Introducing EX - An emotive operator; 4.1.6 The EX operator is expressive
4.1.6.1 On the non-truth-functionality of exclamations4.1.6.2 Non-embeddability: A hallmark of expressive content and exclamations; 4.1.6.3 A brief review of other markers of expressive meaning; 4.1.7 The EX operator is scalar; 4.1.8 On the role of interjections and other prototypical elements; 4.1.9 Formal matters: What is in EX and what isn't; 4.1.10 Two types of optatives: EX-optatives and Adv-optatives; 4.1.11 Summary; 4.2 An alternative: Deriving desirability from the pragmatics; 4.2.1 Biezma (2011ab) in a nutshell; 4.2.2 Are optatives conditionals?
4.2.3 Do optatives involve reversed topicality?4.2.4 Can we derive desirability from the discourse?; On the role of mood in exclamations; 5.1 The core proposal: Connecting V to C via mood; 5.1.1 Two puzzles; 5.1.2 One solution (in a nutshell); 5.1.3 A split mood realization system in German exclamations; 5.1.4 Generalized split-TAM; 5.1.5 Syntactic implementation - on mood movement and V1; 5.1.6 On the content of C; 5.1.7 Interim summary; 5.2 Mood selection; 5.2.1 Out in the optative left field: An apparent selection problem; 5.2.2 Towards a solution
5.3 Mood, exclamations and the connection to verb second
Record Nr. UNINA-9910810749503321
Grosz Patrick Georg  
Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : John Benjamins Pub. Co., 2012
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Tense-aspect-modality in a second language : contemporary perspectives / / edited by Martin Howard, Pascale Leclercq
Tense-aspect-modality in a second language : contemporary perspectives / / edited by Martin Howard, Pascale Leclercq
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , [2017]
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource
Disciplina 415/.6
Collana Studies in bilingualism
Soggetto topico Language and languages - Study and teaching - Research
Second language acquisition - Research
Interlanguage (Language learning) - Research
Grammar, Comparative and general - Tense
Grammar, Comparative and general - Aspect
Grammar, Comparative and general - Modularity
English language - Grammar, Comparative
French language - Grammar, Comparative
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNINA-9910163089703321
Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , [2017]
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui