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Grammatical Constructions
Back to the roots
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Main description:This volume brings into focus the conceptual roots of the notion 'grammatical construction' as the theoretical entity that constitutes the backbone of Construction Grammar, a unique grammatical model in which grammatical constructions have the status of elementary building blocks of human language. By exploring the analytic potential and applicability of this notion, the contributions illustrate some of the fundamental concerns of constructional research. These include issues of sentence structure in a model that rejects the autonomy of syntax; the contribution of Frame Semant...
Main description:
This volume brings into focus the conceptual roots of the notion 'grammatical construction' as the theoretical entity that constitutes the backbone of Construction Grammar, a unique grammatical model in which grammatical constructions have the status of elementary building blocks of human language. By exploring the analytic potential and applicability of this notion, the contributions illustrate some of the fundamental concerns of constructional research. These include issues of sentence structure in a model that rejects the autonomy of syntax; the contribution of Frame Semantics in establishing the relationship between syntactic patterning and the lexical meaning of verbs; and the challenge of capturing the dynamic and variable nature of grammatical structure in a systematic way. All the authors share a commitment to studying grammar in its use, which gives the book a rich empirical dimension that draws on authentic data from typologically diverse languages.
Table of contents:
- Introduction
- I. Syntactic patterning
- 1. Definite null objects in (spoken) French
- 2. From relativization to clause-linkage
- 3. Argument structure constructions and the argument-adjunct distinction
- II. Syntax and semantics of verbs
- 4. The role of verb meaning in locative alternations
- 5. Verbal polysemy and Frame Semantics in Construction Grammar
- 6. A constructional approach to mimetic verbs
- III. Language variation and change
- 7. Integration, grammaticization, and constructional meaning
- 8. Constructions and variability
- 9. Construction Grammar as a conceptual framework for linguistic typology
- Index
- Index of constructions
This volume brings into focus the conceptual roots of the notion 'grammatical construction' as the theoretical entity that constitutes the backbone of Construction Grammar, a unique grammatical model in which grammatical constructions have the status of elementary building blocks of human language. By exploring the analytic potential and applicability of this notion, the contributions illustrate some of the fundamental concerns of constructional research. These include issues of sentence structure in a model that rejects the autonomy of syntax; the contribution of Frame Semantics in establishing the relationship between syntactic patterning and the lexical meaning of verbs; and the challenge of capturing the dynamic and variable nature of grammatical structure in a systematic way. All the authors share a commitment to studying grammar in its use, which gives the book a rich empirical dimension that draws on authentic data from typologically diverse languages.
Table of contents:
- Introduction
- I. Syntactic patterning
- 1. Definite null objects in (spoken) French
- 2. From relativization to clause-linkage
- 3. Argument structure constructions and the argument-adjunct distinction
- II. Syntax and semantics of verbs
- 4. The role of verb meaning in locative alternations
- 5. Verbal polysemy and Frame Semantics in Construction Grammar
- 6. A constructional approach to mimetic verbs
- III. Language variation and change
- 7. Integration, grammaticization, and constructional meaning
- 8. Constructions and variability
- 9. Construction Grammar as a conceptual framework for linguistic typology
- Index
- Index of constructions