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Print Price: $136.50

Format:
Hardback
192 pp.
156 mm x 234 mm

ISBN-13:
9780198744580

Publication date:
April 2017

Imprint: OUP UK


Semantics and Morphosyntactic Variation

Qualities and the Grammar of Property Concepts

Itamar Francez and Andrew Koontz-Garboden

Series : Oxford Studies in Theoretical Linguistics

This book explores a key issue in linguistic theory, the systematic variation in form between semantic equivalents across languages. Two contrasting views of the role of lexical meaning in the analysis of such variation can be found in the literature: (i) uniformity, whereby lexical meaning is universal, and variation arises from idiosyncratic differences in the inventory and phonological shape of language-particular functional material, and (ii) transparency, whereby systematic variation in form arises from systematic variation in the meaning of basic lexical items.

In this volume, Itamar Francez and Andrew Koontz-Garboden contrast these views as applied to the empirical domain of property concept sentences - sentences expressing adjectival predication and their translational equivalents across languages. They demonstrate that property concept sentences vary systematically between possessive and predicative form, and propose a transparentist analysis of this variation that links it to the lexical denotations of basic property concept lexemes. At the heart of the analysis are qualities: mass-like model theoretic objects that closely resemble scales. The authors contrast their transparentist analysis with uniformitarian alternatives, demonstrating its theoretical and empirical advantages. They then show that the proposed theory of qualities can account for interesting and novel observations in two central domains of grammatical theory: the theory of syntactic categories, and the theory of mass nouns. The overall results highlight the importance of the lexicon as a locus of generalizations about the limits of crosslinguistic variation.

Readership : Graduate students and researchers in the fields of morphosyntax and semantics, particularly those with an interest in the semantics of property concept sentences, mass nouns, and lexical categories.

1. Introduction: Lexical semantics and morphosyntactic patterns
2. Variation in the form of property concept sentences: The explananda
3. The lexical semantic variation hypothesis
4. The locus of variation in property concept sentences
5. Meaning and Category: Semantic constraints on parts of speech
6. Quality nouns and other mass nouns
7. Conclusion

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Itamar Francez is Assistant Professor of Linguistics at the University of Chicago. His research interests are mostly in the interaction of lexical, compositional, and contextual aspects of interpretation, and in the role of meaning in structuring morphosyntactic form. His work has appeared in journals such as Journal of Semantics, Natural Language and Linguistic Theory, and Language. Andrew Koontz-Garboden is Senior Lecturer in Linguistics in the Department of Linguistics and English Language at The University of Manchester. He is interested in how word meaning shapes the grammars of particular languages and underpins aspects of the structural diversity of all languages. He also has interests in language documentation and description, and has done extensive work on the Misumalpan language Ulwa.

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Special Features

  • Analyses data from a range of languages including Ulwa, Malayam, and Hausa.
  • Provides valuable insights into the theory of syntactic categories and the theory of mass nouns.
  • Examines the limits of what a possible human language can look like.