Ten Lectures On Field Semantics And Semantic Typology


Download Ten Lectures On Field Semantics And Semantic Typology PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get Ten Lectures On Field Semantics And Semantic Typology book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.

Download

Ten Lectures on Field Semantics and Semantic Typology


Ten Lectures on Field Semantics and Semantic Typology

Author: Jürgen Bohnemeyer

language: en

Publisher: BRILL

Release Date: 2021-09-27


DOWNLOAD





The first four lectures revolve around field semantics – research methods for studying linguistic meaning under fieldwork conditions. The remaining six lectures deal with semantic typology, the crosslinguistic study of how humans communicate about the world in terms of the meaning categories of the languages they speak. Together, the lectures present one of the first comprehensive introductions to either topic. A thread pervading the lectures involves the following questions: how much do languages vary in how they represent reality? To what extent does this variation reflect cultural differences? To what extent does it influence the nonverbal thinking of the speakers?

Ten Lectures on Construction Grammar and Typology


Ten Lectures on Construction Grammar and Typology

Author: William Croft

language: en

Publisher: BRILL

Release Date: 2020-09-25


DOWNLOAD





In Ten Lectures on Construction Grammar and Typology, William Croft presents a unified theory of linguistic form and meaning that encompasses crosslinguistic diversity, verbalization and language change. Croft begins from construction grammar, a theory of syntax in which all syntactic structures are a pairing of form and meaning. Constructions are posited as basic; syntactic categories are defined by constructions. The internal structure of constructions directly link elements of constructions to the meanings they express, Constructions across languages can be situated in a space of syntactic variation. Grammar emerges from the verbalization of experience. Constructions occur in a probability distribution across the conceptual space of meanings. These probability distributions evolve, leading to grammatical change in language, modeled in an evolutionary framework.

Ten Lectures on Event Structure in a Network Theory of Language


Ten Lectures on Event Structure in a Network Theory of Language

Author: Nikolas Gisborne

language: en

Publisher: BRILL

Release Date: 2020-08-31


DOWNLOAD





In Ten Lectures on Event Structure in a Network Theory of Language, Nikolas Gisborne explores verb meaning. He discusses theories of events and how a network model of language-in-the-mind should be theorized; what the lexicon is; how to probe word meaning; evidence for structure in word meaning; polysemy; the lexical semantics of causation; a type hierarchy of events; and event types cross-linguistically. He also looks at the relationship between different classes of events or event types and aktionsarten; transitivity alternations and argument linking. Gisborne argues that the social and cognitive embedding of language, requires a view of linguistic structure as a network where even the analysis of verb meaning can require an understanding of the role of speaker and hearer.