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  • 1
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    Amsterdam ; : J. Benjamins,
    UID:
    almahu_9949179454902882
    Umfang: 1 online resource (vi, 314 pages) : , illustrations
    Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-282-16122-9 , 9786612161223 , 90-272-9649-9
    Serie: Amsterdam studies in the theory and history of linguistic science. Series IV, Current issues in linguistic theory, v. 242
    Inhalt: This text originated in the Colloquium on Verb Construction in German and Dutch, held at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig in February 2001. The book represents a number of different schools on the topic.
    Anmerkung: Includes some of the papers presented at the Colloquium on Verb Constructions in German and Dutch held Feb. 2-3, 2001, at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig. , VERB CONSTRUCTIONS IN GERMAN AND DUTCH -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC page -- Table of contents -- Introduction -- Chapter 1. Verb clusters and the scope of adjuncts in Dutch -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Dutch cross-serial dependencies in HPSG -- 3. LRS Semantics -- 4. Adjuncts as complements -- 4.1. Syntax -- 4.2. Semantics -- 5. The scope of adjuncts with respect to the matrix verb -- 6. Scrambling of adjuncts and arguments -- 7. A constraint on word order and scope -- 7.1. Multiple adjuncts -- 7.2. Scope of adjuncts and arguments -- 7.3. A semantic constraint on dependency structure -- 8. Conclusions -- Acknowledgements -- Notes -- Chapter 2. Verbal clusters and cluster creepers -- 1. The issue and the gambits -- 1.1. Core examples -- 1.2. Crossing relations -- 1.3. Gambit (9i): Direct compounding -- 1.4. Gambit (9ii): Full argument exodus -- 1.5. Gambit (iii): Full exodus of heads -- 1.6. Conclusion -- 2. Stress assignment -- 2.1. Grammatical distinctions for metrical trees -- 2.2. X0 heads and XP phrases -- 3. The mechanics of head raising -- 3.1. An option between V0 heads -- 3.2. Predicate licensing and the Extended Projection Principle -- 4. Extensions -- 4.1. The past participle as a cluster creeper -- 4.2. The VP raising -- 5. Conclusion -- Notes -- Chapter 3. V-clustering and clause union -- 1. Overview: Descriptive generalizations and their theoretical implications -- 2. A descriptive survey of V-clustering and clause union in German -- 2.1. The structure of the clusters -- 2.2. Comparison of German and Dutch VCs, especially with respect to IPP -- 3. Towards an empirically adequate modeling of the clustering phenomena -- 3.1. Deriving the Dutch cluster - left-adjunction and/or cliticization to the right -- 3.2. The German cluster structure and IPP inversion -- 3.3. The grammatical causality of clustering. , 4. Grammar-theoretical afterthoughts -- Notes -- Chapter 4. West-Germanic verb clusters in LFG -- 1. Introduction -- 2. West Germanic Infinitival Complements as described in ZK: Dutch -- 3. Variation in the order of verbal elements in Dutch -- 3.1. Properties of verbs taking non-tensed verbal complements -- Verbal complements: Morphological distinctions -- Verbal complements: Functional distinctions -- Verbal complements: C-structure distinctions -- 3.2. Restrictions within the verbal cluster -- Morphological restriction: Infinitivus pro participio -- Ordering constraints in the verb cluster -- Summary: An LFG analysis of Dutch verb clusters -- 4. Prolegomena to a treatment of German verb clusters -- 5. Conclusion -- Notes -- Chapter 5. Subjects in unexpected places and the notion of "predicate'' -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Valence in the verb cluster -- 3. Remarks on linear order -- 4. Fronted (partial) VPs -- 5. Subjects in fronted phrases -- 5.1. Semantic restrictions on fronted verbal projections -- 5.2. The locality of phrase-internal subjects -- 5.3. Raising spirits -- 6. Argument sharing and periphrastic predicates -- 6.1. Valence vs. argument structure -- 6.2. Predicates -- 6.3. Valence increasing environments -- 6.4. An exceptional construction -- 7. Summary and final remarks -- Notes -- Chapter 6. Dutch and German verb constructions in Performance Grammar -- 0. Introduction -- 1. Essentials of Performance Grammar -- 1.1. Hierarchical structures in Performance Grammar -- 1.2. Linear structure in PG -- 2. Dutch verb constructions -- 3. German verb constructions -- 4. Conclusion -- Acknowledgement -- Notes -- Chapter 7. Coherent constructions in German -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Tree Adjoining Grammar -- 3. Coherence and clause union: The incorporation approach -- 3.1. Coherent constructions -- 3.2. Clause union: An incorporation analysis. , 3.3. Tree Adjoining Grammar and lexicalism -- 4. Arguments against clause union -- 4.1. Is clause union necessary? -- 4.2. Is clause union sufficient? -- 5. Coherence and tree rewriting: The syntactic approach -- 5.1. A formalism for (relatively) free word order -- 5.2. DSG as a metalanguage for syntax -- 5.3. Deriving coherent and incoherent constructions -- 5.4. Accounting for the data -- 6. Conclusion -- Notes -- Chapter 8. Verb clusters and branching directionality in German and Dutch -- 0. Introduction -- 1. The Semantic Syntax model -- 1.1. General architecture -- 1.2. Branching directionality -- 1.3. The Auxiliary System -- 1.4. Complementation types -- 2. The rule system and some examples -- 3. Matrix Greed -- 4. Dutch V-clusters -- 4.1. Optional and obligatory PR -- 4.2. The Third Construction -- 4.3. Directionality -- 4.4. Creeping -- 4.5. Non-verbal (pseudo)complements -- 5. German V-clusters -- 6. The data problem (with special reference to German) -- 7. Discussion -- Notes -- References -- Index -- The Current Issues in Linguistic Theory (CILT) series. , English
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 1-58811-401-5
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 90-272-4754-4
    Sprache: Englisch
    Bibliothek Standort Signatur Band/Heft/Jahr Verfügbarkeit
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  • 2
    Buch
    Buch
    Lincolnwood, Ill. : NTC Publ. Group, Passport Books
    UID:
    kobvindex_ZLB12446897
    Umfang: 120 Seiten
    Ausgabe: 9. [ed.]
    ISBN: 0844225002
    Anmerkung: Text engl.
    Sprache: Englisch
    Schlagwort(e): Deutsch ; Verb ; Deutsch ; Grammatik ; Einführung ; Einführung ; Einführung
    Bibliothek Standort Signatur Band/Heft/Jahr Verfügbarkeit
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  • 3
    Buch
    Buch
    New York, NY [u.a.] : McGraw-Hill
    UID:
    kobvindex_ZLB09314828
    Umfang: 131 Seiten
    Ausgabe: 2. ed.
    ISBN: 9780071498036
    Sprache: Englisch
    Schlagwort(e): Deutsch ; Englisches Sprachgebiet ; Konjugation ; Tabelle ; Deutsch ; Grammatik ; Englisches Sprachgebiet ; Einführung ; Tabelle ; Einführung ; Einführung ; Tabelle
    Bibliothek Standort Signatur Band/Heft/Jahr Verfügbarkeit
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  • 4
    UID:
    almahu_9949178846602882
    Umfang: xxi, 333 p. : , ill., map.
    Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-282-10472-1 , 9786612104725 , 90-272-8968-9
    Serie: Studies in functional and structural linguistics, v. 60
    Inhalt: Drawing on data extracted from the British National Corpus and the Corpus de Referencia del Español Actual in conjunction with elicitation data from native speakers, this chapter constitutes a first step towards a constructionist, usage-based analysis of secondary predication with verba dicendi et declarandi (e.g., say, declare,decir 'say', declarar 'declare') in English and Spanish. Within this environment (the "declarative subjective-transitive" construction), at least three lower-level (i.e., item-specific) configurations can be posited in the light of coercion via a reflexive pronoun, an imperative form and the passive voice in both languages. While there is a considerable degree of similarity regarding the inventory of matrix verbs as well as the specific combinations attested in these three environments in English and Spanish, the symmetry is nonetheless far from perfect, thus corroborating the language-specific nature of constructions (Croft 2003).
    Anmerkung: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , Current Trends in Contrastive Linguistics -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- Contributors -- Abbreviations used in glosses -- Introduction -- 1. Grammatical categories in contrast -- 2. Contrastive linguistics and corpus studies -- 3. Meaning and cognition from a contrastive perspective -- Acknowledgments -- References -- Part 1 . Grammatical categories in contrast -- Ways of impersonalizing -- 1. Introduction -- 2. What is a third person plural impersonal construction? -- 2.1 Vague vs. impersonal reference -- 2.2 Impersonal vs. generic -- 2.3 The commonality of 3pl impersonals -- 3. The referents of the 3pl -- 4. Verbal impersonals -- 4.1 Reflexive impersonals -- 4.2 Participle impersonals -- 4.3 Agentless passives -- 5. Concluding remarks -- References -- Construing reference in context -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Context and the construal of reference -- 3. Structures -- 3.1 Finnish -- 3.1.1 Passive in Finnish -- 3.1.2 Zero person construction in Finnish -- 3.2 French -- 3.2.1 Passive in French -- 3.2.2 The pronoun on in French -- 4. Functions -- 5. Data -- 6. Non-specific reference forms in CMC -- 6.1 Non-specific reference in the Finnish data -- 6.2 Non-specific reference in the French data -- 6.2.1 French passive constructions -- 6.2.2 The pronoun on -- 7. Conclusions -- References -- The contrast between pronoun position in European Portuguese and Castilian Spanish -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The clause-initial P1 position -- 3. Clitics in FG -- 3.1 Clitics and the Wackernagel position -- 3.2 An aside on Brazilian Portuguese -- 3.3 An aside on a challenge to the clitic analysis -- 4. Enclisis and proclisis in EP and CS -- 5. The position of the verb in EP and CS -- 6. The subject in EP and in CS -- 7. Conclusion -- References -- Modals and typology -- 1. Modality as a typological category -- 1.1 Defining modality. , 1.2 Prototypes in cognitive psychology and lexical semantics -- 1.3 Prototypes in grammar -- 1.4 Prototypes in typology -- 1.5 Prototypes and modality -- 1.6 A typological cluster approach to modality -- 1.6.1 Possibility and necessity -- 1.6.2 Epistemic and deontic -- 1.6.3 Subjectivity -- 1.6.4 Extremes of the modality scale -- 2. Using the criteria - English -- 3. Using the criteria - German and English in contrast -- 4. Conclusion -- References -- Part 2 . Contrastive linguistics and corpus studies -- Parallel texts and corpus-based contrastive analysis -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Parallel concordancing -- 2.1 Alignment -- 2.2 Sorting the results -- 2.3 Advanced Search -- 3. Frequency information -- 4. Finding translations -- 4.1 Hot Words and Translation -- 5. Parallel Search -- 6. Summary -- References -- Machine translation and human translation -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Why MT Matters -- 3. MT and the human translator -- 4. Evaluation of machine translation -- 5. Experimenting with the evaluation of MT as a pedagogical exercise -- 5.1 METRA -- 5.2 Using corpora to find 'genuine' examples -- 6. TrAva and evaluation of MT -- 6.1 Classification of errors - problems -- 6.2 Classification of errors - possible solutions -- 7. Student projects and research -- 7.1 Lexical problems - collocation, synonymy and polysemy -- 7.2 Lexical + syntactic problems - homographs, closed system words, lexical bundles/multi-word units, clichés, idioms -- 8. Future research possibilities -- 8.1 METRA and corpora work for contrastive linguistics -- 8.2 TrAva - possible developments -- 8.3 CORTA and the METRA logs -- 9. Conclusions -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Linguateca Links -- Basically speaking' -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Corpora and analytical tools -- 3. Frequencies of the adverbs in the corpora -- 4. Collocational analysis -- 4.1 Methodology. , 4.2 The English adverbs -- 4.2.1 Basically -- 4.2.2 Essentially -- 4.2.3 Fundamentally -- 4.3 The Spanish adverbs -- 4.3.1 Básicamente -- 4.3.2 Esencialmente -- 4.3.3 Fundamentalmente -- 4.4 Overall comparison -- 5. Syntactic properties -- 5.1 The English adverbs -- 5.2 The Spanish adverbs -- 6. Conclusions -- 6.1 Frequency distribution of the adverbs -- 6.2 Collocational profiles -- 6.3 Syntactic properties -- References -- Causative make and faire -- 1. Introduction -- 2. English and French causative constructions: Apparent equivalence -- 3. Collecting the data -- 4. Features of causative make and faire in a comparable corpus -- 4.1 Identity between make and faire? -- 4.2 Make included in faire? -- 4.3 Partial overlap between make and faire -- 5. Equivalence of causative make and faire in a parallel corpus -- 5.1 Translation and back-translation -- 5.2 Mutual correspondence -- 5.3 Congruent constructions -- 5.4 Alternative equivalents -- 5.4.1 Equivalents of causative faire -- 5.4.2 Equivalents of causative make -- 6. Causative make and faire: Deceptive equivalence - and some implications -- 7. Conclusion -- References -- Part 3 . Meaning and cognition from a contrastive perspective -- Universal human concepts as a basis for contrastive linguistic semantics -- 1. A tertium comparationis for contrastive semantics -- 1.1 No comparisons without 'terms of comparison' -- 1.2 The NSM metalanguage -- 2. Yearning-missing" words in Polish, Russian and Spanish -- 2.1 Polish tęsknota (verb form: tęsknić) -- 2.2 Russian toska -- 2.3 Spanish and Galician morriña -- 2.4 Review and coda -- 3. Diminutives" in Spanish and Australian English -- 3.1 Two meanings of the Spanish diminutive -- 3.2 The Australian English "diminutive" -- 4. Conclusions -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Subjective construal as a 'fashion of speaking' in Japanese -- 1. Introduction. , 2. Langacker on subjective and objective construal -- 3. Three proposals for revision -- 4. An example -- 5. Further examples -- 6. Perceiver-less sentences -- 7. Subject-object merger: A philosophical implication -- 8. Tense alternation -- 9. Speaker-writer responsibility vs. listener-reader responsibility -- 10. Concluding remarks: With special reference to Herrfahrdt's notion of Japanese as 'Erlebnissprache' (1936) -- References -- Grammatical metonymy within the 'action' frame in English and Spanish -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Metaphor and metonymy -- 2.1 Domains and mappings -- 2.2 Metaphor, metonymy and cognitive prominence -- 2.3 Constraints on metaphor and on metonymy -- 3. Levels of description and grammatical metonymy -- 3.1 Grammatical metonymy: Single mappings -- 3.1.1 Categorial conversion -- 3.1.2 Subcategorial conversion -- 3.1.3 Enriched composition -- 3.1.4 Parametrization -- 3.2 Grammatical metonymy and metonymic chains -- 4. Contrastive analysis: The case of Spanish reflex passives -- 4.1 The English inchoative vs. the Spanish reflex (passive) construction -- 4.2 The English internal attribute construction vs. the Spanish evaluative reflex construction -- 4.3 Instrument-subject evaluative constructions in Spanish and English -- 4.4 Metonymy and contrasts -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- Towards a constructionist, usage-based account of secondary predication with verba dicendi et declarandi in English and Spanish* -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Constructional polysemy and the subjective-transitive construction in English and Spanish -- 3. Coercion within the declarative subjective-transitive construction -- 3.1 Some preliminaries regarding coercion -- 3.2 Coercion via a reflexive pronoun -- 3.3 Coercion via the imperative -- 3.4 Coercion via the passive voice -- 4. Some closing remarks -- References -- Index of terms -- Index of languages. , Index of scholars -- The series Studies In Functional And Structural Linguistics. , English
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 90-272-1571-5
    Sprache: Englisch
    Bibliothek Standort Signatur Band/Heft/Jahr Verfügbarkeit
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  • 5
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    Amsterdam ; : J. Benjamins,
    UID:
    edocfu_9959238992602883
    Umfang: 1 online resource (302 p.)
    Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-283-35960-X , 9786613359605 , 90-272-8062-2
    Serie: Pragmatics & beyond, 3:2/3
    Inhalt: Deixis - the rooting of utterances in the speech situation - is one of the most salient universals of natural language. The ways in which different languages link utterances to pragmatic factors such as speech time, speech place, and speech participants show a rich variation. This makes deixis a particular fruitful domain for the study of universals, language comparison, and the relationship between language and reality. This volume presents and discusses deictic systems of both Indo-European and non-Indo-European languages, including Russian, Czech, Spanish, German (standard and dialect), Hun
    Anmerkung: English and German. , HERE AND THERE Cross-linguistic Studies on Deixis and Demonstration; Editorial page; Title page; Copyright page; Table of content; INTRODUCTION; REFERENCES; UP/DOWN, FRONT/BACK, LEFT/RIGHT A CONTRASTIVE STUDY OF HAUSA AND ENGLISH; NOTES; REFERENCES; DA AND THE SYSTEM OF SPATIAL DEIXIS IN GERMAN; 1. DA AND THE FIELD OF DEICTIC EXPRESSIONS IN GERMAN; 2. DA AND THE FIELD OF STRICT SPATIAL DEIXIS IN GERMAN; 3. DA AS A SPATIAL ANAPHOR; 4. SUMMARY; REFERENCES; REPRESENTATIONS OF LOCAL NI-DEIXIS IN SWAHILI IN RELATION TO BÜHLER'S ""ORIGO DES ZEIGFELDS"" , 1. BÜHLER'S ""ORIGO DES ZEIGFELDS"" AND ITS NECESSARY EXTENSION2. SOME GENERAL REMARKS ON SWAHILI SYNTAX; 3. LOCAL NI-DEICTIC EXPRESSIONS IN SWAHILI; NOTES; REFERENCES; SOME SYSTEMS OF SPATIAL DEIXIS IN PAPUAN LANGUAGES; 1. INTRODUCTION; 2. THE SYSTEM OF LOCAL DEIXIS IN THE EIPO, YALE AND ANGGURUK LANGUAGE; 2.1 The Eipo language; 2.2 The Yale language; 2.3 The Angguruk language; 3. PROBLEMS AND QUESTIONS; 4. CONCLUSION; NOTES; REFERENCES; LOCAL DEIXIS IN TOLAI; 1. INTRODUCTION; 2. THE TOLAI AREA; 3. SOME BASIC FEATURES OF TOLAI GRAMMAR; 4. THE SYNTACTIC FUNCTIONS OF LOCAL DEICTICS , 5. CLASSIFICATION OF LOCAL DEICTICSCONCLUSION; NOTES; REFERENCES; THE SYSTEM OF LOCAL DEIXIS IN SPANISH; NOTES; REFERENCES; ON VERB DEIXIS IN HUNGARIAN; 1. FUNDAMENTALS OF DEIXIS; 1.1 Pointing and naming; 1.2 Bühler's analysis; 1.3 Schmid's analysis; 1.4 Austerlitz' analysis; 2. PERSONAL DEIXIS AND MOTION VERBS IN HUNGARIAN; 2.1 Asymmetry of inflectional paradigm; 2.2 Deixis and motion verbs; SUMMARY; NOTES; REFERENCES; DEMONSTRATIVE PRONOUNS IN RUSSIAN AND CZECH - DEIXIS AND ANAPHORA; 1. AIMS OF THE PAPER; 2. DISCUSSION OF ALTERNATIVE BASIC SCHEMES OF SEMANTICOPPOSITIONS , 3. EXTENDED SCHEME OF DEMONSTRATIVE PRONOUNS4. DISCUSSION OF THE ESSENTIAL DEICTIC CATEGORIES; 5. ""NEUTRAL ELEMENT"" VERSUS ""NEUTRALIZATION""; NOTES; REFERENCES; DEIXIS AND ANAPHORA IN GERMAN DIALECTS: THE SEMANTICS AND PRAGMATICS OF TWO DEFINITE ARTICLES IN DIALECTAL VARIETIES; 1. INRODUCTION: THE NATURE OF THE PROBLEM; 2. FUNCTIONAL ANALYSIS OF LINGUISTIC EXPRESSIONS CONTAINING THE DEFINITE ARTICLE; 2.1 Generic reference; 2.2 Generic reference to concepts; 2.3 Specific reference; 2.4 The definite article in deictic us; 2.5 The definite article in anaphorical use , 2.6 The definite article in nominais referring to unique objects3. TWO PARADIGMS OF THE DEFINITE ARTICLE AND THEIR FUNCTIONS IN A DIALECT OF THE RHINELAND; 3.1 List of the definite articles; 3.2 dor-article. Kinds of reference; SOME REMARKS ON JAPANESE DEICTICS; 3.2.1 dor-article in generic reference; 3.2.2 The dor-article in generic reference to concepts; 3.2.3 The dor-article in specific reference referring to unique objects; 3.3 de - article. Kinds of reference; 3.3.1 Deictic reference; 4. REFERENCE OF THE DEFINITE ARTICLE IN DIALECT AND STANDARD , 5. EVIDENCE FROM A BROADER DATA BASIS: DOUBLE PARADIGMS OF THE DEFINITE ARTICLE IN OTHER DIALECTSAND IN STANDARD GERMAN , English
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 90-272-2519-2
    Sprache: Englisch
    Bibliothek Standort Signatur Band/Heft/Jahr Verfügbarkeit
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  • 6
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    Amsterdam ; : J. Benjamins,
    UID:
    almahu_9949179405702882
    Umfang: 1 online resource (302 p.)
    Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-283-35960-X , 9786613359605 , 90-272-8062-2
    Serie: Pragmatics & beyond, 3:2/3
    Inhalt: Deixis - the rooting of utterances in the speech situation - is one of the most salient universals of natural language. The ways in which different languages link utterances to pragmatic factors such as speech time, speech place, and speech participants show a rich variation. This makes deixis a particular fruitful domain for the study of universals, language comparison, and the relationship between language and reality. This volume presents and discusses deictic systems of both Indo-European and non-Indo-European languages, including Russian, Czech, Spanish, German (standard and dialect), Hun
    Anmerkung: English and German. , HERE AND THERE Cross-linguistic Studies on Deixis and Demonstration; Editorial page; Title page; Copyright page; Table of content; INTRODUCTION; REFERENCES; UP/DOWN, FRONT/BACK, LEFT/RIGHT A CONTRASTIVE STUDY OF HAUSA AND ENGLISH; NOTES; REFERENCES; DA AND THE SYSTEM OF SPATIAL DEIXIS IN GERMAN; 1. DA AND THE FIELD OF DEICTIC EXPRESSIONS IN GERMAN; 2. DA AND THE FIELD OF STRICT SPATIAL DEIXIS IN GERMAN; 3. DA AS A SPATIAL ANAPHOR; 4. SUMMARY; REFERENCES; REPRESENTATIONS OF LOCAL NI-DEIXIS IN SWAHILI IN RELATION TO BÜHLER'S ""ORIGO DES ZEIGFELDS"" , 1. BÜHLER'S ""ORIGO DES ZEIGFELDS"" AND ITS NECESSARY EXTENSION2. SOME GENERAL REMARKS ON SWAHILI SYNTAX; 3. LOCAL NI-DEICTIC EXPRESSIONS IN SWAHILI; NOTES; REFERENCES; SOME SYSTEMS OF SPATIAL DEIXIS IN PAPUAN LANGUAGES; 1. INTRODUCTION; 2. THE SYSTEM OF LOCAL DEIXIS IN THE EIPO, YALE AND ANGGURUK LANGUAGE; 2.1 The Eipo language; 2.2 The Yale language; 2.3 The Angguruk language; 3. PROBLEMS AND QUESTIONS; 4. CONCLUSION; NOTES; REFERENCES; LOCAL DEIXIS IN TOLAI; 1. INTRODUCTION; 2. THE TOLAI AREA; 3. SOME BASIC FEATURES OF TOLAI GRAMMAR; 4. THE SYNTACTIC FUNCTIONS OF LOCAL DEICTICS , 5. CLASSIFICATION OF LOCAL DEICTICSCONCLUSION; NOTES; REFERENCES; THE SYSTEM OF LOCAL DEIXIS IN SPANISH; NOTES; REFERENCES; ON VERB DEIXIS IN HUNGARIAN; 1. FUNDAMENTALS OF DEIXIS; 1.1 Pointing and naming; 1.2 Bühler's analysis; 1.3 Schmid's analysis; 1.4 Austerlitz' analysis; 2. PERSONAL DEIXIS AND MOTION VERBS IN HUNGARIAN; 2.1 Asymmetry of inflectional paradigm; 2.2 Deixis and motion verbs; SUMMARY; NOTES; REFERENCES; DEMONSTRATIVE PRONOUNS IN RUSSIAN AND CZECH - DEIXIS AND ANAPHORA; 1. AIMS OF THE PAPER; 2. DISCUSSION OF ALTERNATIVE BASIC SCHEMES OF SEMANTICOPPOSITIONS , 3. EXTENDED SCHEME OF DEMONSTRATIVE PRONOUNS4. DISCUSSION OF THE ESSENTIAL DEICTIC CATEGORIES; 5. ""NEUTRAL ELEMENT"" VERSUS ""NEUTRALIZATION""; NOTES; REFERENCES; DEIXIS AND ANAPHORA IN GERMAN DIALECTS: THE SEMANTICS AND PRAGMATICS OF TWO DEFINITE ARTICLES IN DIALECTAL VARIETIES; 1. INRODUCTION: THE NATURE OF THE PROBLEM; 2. FUNCTIONAL ANALYSIS OF LINGUISTIC EXPRESSIONS CONTAINING THE DEFINITE ARTICLE; 2.1 Generic reference; 2.2 Generic reference to concepts; 2.3 Specific reference; 2.4 The definite article in deictic us; 2.5 The definite article in anaphorical use , 2.6 The definite article in nominais referring to unique objects3. TWO PARADIGMS OF THE DEFINITE ARTICLE AND THEIR FUNCTIONS IN A DIALECT OF THE RHINELAND; 3.1 List of the definite articles; 3.2 dor-article. Kinds of reference; SOME REMARKS ON JAPANESE DEICTICS; 3.2.1 dor-article in generic reference; 3.2.2 The dor-article in generic reference to concepts; 3.2.3 The dor-article in specific reference referring to unique objects; 3.3 de - article. Kinds of reference; 3.3.1 Deictic reference; 4. REFERENCE OF THE DEFINITE ARTICLE IN DIALECT AND STANDARD , 5. EVIDENCE FROM A BROADER DATA BASIS: DOUBLE PARADIGMS OF THE DEFINITE ARTICLE IN OTHER DIALECTSAND IN STANDARD GERMAN , English
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 90-272-2519-2
    Sprache: Englisch
    Bibliothek Standort Signatur Band/Heft/Jahr Verfügbarkeit
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