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Flexible Word Classes Typological Studies Of Underspecified Parts Of Speech Jan Rijkhoff

  • SKU: BELL-4749736
Flexible Word Classes Typological Studies Of Underspecified Parts Of Speech Jan Rijkhoff
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Flexible Word Classes Typological Studies Of Underspecified Parts Of Speech Jan Rijkhoff instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxford University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.05 MB
Pages: 352
Author: Jan Rijkhoff, Eva van Lier
ISBN: 9780199668441, 0199668442
Language: English
Year: 2013

Product desciption

Flexible Word Classes Typological Studies Of Underspecified Parts Of Speech Jan Rijkhoff by Jan Rijkhoff, Eva Van Lier 9780199668441, 0199668442 instant download after payment.

This book is the first major cross-linguistic study of 'flexible words', i.e. words that cannot be classified in terms of the traditional lexical categories Verb, Noun, Adjective or Adverb. Flexible words can - without special morphosyntactic marking - serve in functions for which other languages must employ members of two or more of the four traditional, 'specialised' word classes. Thus, flexible words are underspecified for communicative functions like 'predicating' (verbal function), 'referring' (nominal function) or 'modifying' (a function typically associated with adjectives and e.g. manner adverbs).
Even though linguists have been aware of flexible world classes for more than a century, the phenomenon has not played a role in the development of linguistic typology or modern grammatical theory. The current volume aims to address this gap by offering detailed studies on lexical word classes, investigating their properties and what it means for the grammar of a language to have such a word class. It includes new cross-linguistic studies of word class systems as well as original descriptive and theoretical contributions from authors with an expert knowledge of languages that have played - or should play - a role in the debate about flexible word classes, including Kharia, Riau Indonesian, Santali, Sri Lanka Malay, Lushootseed, Gooniyandi, and Late Archaic Chinese.

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