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(Synthese language library, v. 19 . Linguistic categories : auxiliaries and related puzzles / edited by Frank Heny and Barry Richards ; vol. 1)
D. Reidel , Sold and distributed in the U.S.A. and Canada by Kluwer Academic Publishers, c1983
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Library, Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences, Kyoto University数研
C-P||Groningen||1980.788022868
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Based on papers presented at the Fourth Groningen Round Table, held in July 1980 and organized by the Institite for General Linguistics of Groningen University
Includes bibliographies and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
VIrtually all the papers in these volumes originated in presentations at the Fourth Groningen Round Table, held in July 1980. That conference, organ ized by the Institute for General linguistics of Groningen University was the fourth in an irregular series of meetings devoted to issues of topical interest to linguists. Its predecessor, the Third Round Table, was held in June 1976, and dealt with the semantics of natural language. A selection of the papers was published as Syntax and Semantics 10, Selections from the Third Groningen Round Table, ed. by F. Heny and H. Schnelle, Academic Press, 1979. This fourth meeting was more narrowly focussed. The original intention was to examine the hypothesis of Akrnajian, Steele and Wasow in their paper 'The Category AUX in Universal Grammar', Linguistic Inquiry 10, 1-64. Ultimately the topic was broadened considerably to encompass not only the syntax, semantics and morphology of auxiliaries and related elements, but to tackle the problem (implicit in the original work of Akmajian, Steele and Wasow) of justifying the selection of categories for the analysis of natural language. In the summer of 1979, a workshop and short, informal conference were held at the University of Salzburg, in preparation for the Round Table. These were organized in conjunction with the Summer Institute of the linguistic Society of America. The cooperation of the LSA and of the University of Salzburg, and in particular of the Director of that Institute, Professor Gaberell Drachman, is hereby gratefully acknowledged.
Table of Contents
One / The 'AUX' Hypothesis.- Da and the Category AUX in Bulgarian.- Person-Subject Marking in AUX in Egyptian Arabic.- Two / Some Elusive Categories.- Polarized Auxiliaries.- Marking Constituents.- Government and the Search for AUXes: A Case Study in Cross-linguistic Category Identification.- On Two Types of Infinitival Complementation.- The Case of German Adjectives.- Transitive Adjectives: A Case of Categorial Reanalysis.
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