The Structure Of The Lexicon In Functional Grammar


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The Structure of the Lexicon in Functional Grammar


The Structure of the Lexicon in Functional Grammar

Author: Hella Olbertz

language: en

Publisher: John Benjamins Publishing Company

Release Date: 1998


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In functional grammar, the lexicon plays a central role. Lexical items form the basic building blocks around which the structure of a clause is built. This book examines 5 aspects of the role of the lexicon in functional grammar.

Lexical-Functional Grammar


Lexical-Functional Grammar

Author: Kersti Börjars

language: en

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Release Date: 2019-06-20


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A step-by-step introduction to lexical-functional grammar, using data from English and a range of typologically diverse languages.

The Structure of the Lexicon in Functional Grammar


The Structure of the Lexicon in Functional Grammar

Author: Hella Olbertz

language: en

Publisher: John Benjamins Publishing

Release Date: 1998-06-15


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The papers collected in this volume concern five different aspects of the role of the lexicon in the theory of Functional Grammar such as developed by Simon C. Dik and his co-workers. The volume starts off with an eminently practical section on the Functional-Lexematic Model, a lexicological and lexicographical system which has largely been inspired by Dik’s principle of stepwise lexical decomposition. In addition to a theoretical introduction to the model, applications to English, German and Spanish are presented. The second part of the volume deals with the derivation of action-nouns, pseudo-reflexive verbs and causative constructions, thus offering new perspectives on predicate formation within Functional Grammar. This is followed by a section that centres around an important problem related to valency which up to now has had almost no attention within Functional Grammar: the question of how to account for the collocational properties of predicates. The fourth part of the book discusses (non-prototypical) transitive verbs and their relation to the typology of states of affairs, which leads to proposals of possible adaptations of Dik’s typology. The final section focusses on the relationship between the lexicon and the underlying structure of the clause. Three proposals of varying degrees of radicalism are presented to reconsider this relation.