Details
Title | Studies in language companion series ;. — Functionalist and usage-based approaches to the study of language: in honor of Joan L. Bybee. — v. 192. |
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Other creators | Smith K. Aaron ; Nordquist Dawn ; Bybee Joan L., |
Collection | Электронные книги зарубежных издательств ; Общая коллекция |
Subjects | Functionalism (Linguistics) ; Grammar, Comparative and general — Usage. ; Grammar, Comparative and general — Syntax. ; Discourse analysis. ; LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES — Linguistics — Historical & Comparative. ; EBSCO eBooks |
Document type | Other |
File type | |
Language | English |
Rights | Доступ по паролю из сети Интернет (чтение, печать, копирование) |
Record key | on1012673803 |
Record create date | 11/14/2017 |
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- Functionalist and Usage-based Approaches to the Study of Language
- Editorial page
- Title page
- LCC data
- Table of contents
- Acknowledgments
- The authors’ reflections on Joan
- Edith Bavin
- Soteria Svorou
- Terry Janzen
- Rena Torres Cacoullos
- Earl Brown
- Esther Brown
- K. Aaron Smith
- Damián Wilson
- Clay Beckner
- Dawn Nordquist
- Introduction
- Joan’s scholarly contributions in the field of linguistics
- Natural generative phonology
- Child language acquisition
- Morphology
- Grammaticalization
- Usage-based theory
- Linguistics and beyond
- References
- The papers
- Features of some ergative languages that impact on acquisition
- Introduction
- Cues to acquisition
- Ergative alignment
- Acquiring ergative languages: Some examples of influencing factors
- Hindi
- Warlpiri
- Mayan languages
- Conclusion
- References
- Constructional pressures on ‘sit’ in Modern Greek
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The semantics and morphology of kaθοme ‘I sit’
- 3. Coordination and pseudo-coordination
- 4. Why corpus methodology?
- 5. Contextual cues
- 5.1 Semantic types of coordination
- 5.2 Tense and aspect
- 5.3 Semantic types and tense/aspect correlation
- 5.4 Syntactic compactness of the string
- 5.5 Semantic types and their structural traces
- Extended
- Deliberate
- Simultaneous
- Sequential
- Collection
- 5.6 Subject Person/Number
- 5.7 V2 verbs and their frames
- 5.8 Pragmatic confluences
- 5.9 Summary
- 6. Conclusion
- Abbreviations
- References
- know and understand in ASL
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Grammaticalization in signed languages
- 3. Topic marking and topic constructions in ASL
- 4. Data
- 5. Lexical know and know-topic constructions
- 5.1 KNOW tokens across the ASL conversational corpus
- 5.2 Lexical KNOW
- 5.3 KNOW as a discourse marker
- 5.4 KNOW as a topic marker
- 5.5 Location variation in KNOW tokens
- 6. Lexical understand and understand-topic constructions
- 6.1 Lexical understand
- 6.2 understand-topics
- 7. The emergence of categories in ASL grammar
- 8. Conclusion
- Transcription key
- References
- Traces of demonstrative grammaticalization in Spanish variable subject expression
- 1. Variation as a window into grammaticalization
- 2. Data
- 3. Operationalizing deictic function and other motivations for the use of subject pronouns
- 4. Linguistic conditioning of subject pronouns in early Spanish texts
- 5. The intersection of referent gender and syntactic role of previous mention
- 6. Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- Corpus
- References
- The company that word-boundary sounds keep
- Introduction
- Usage-based models of language
- Spanish /s/
- The present study
- Data and methods
- Results
- Duration
- Center of gravity
- Discussion
- Conclusions
- References
- Introduction
- Cumulative exposure to phonetic reducing environments marks the lexicon
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Background
- 2.1 Lexicalized effects of words’ context histories (FRC)
- 2.2 The dependent variable: Spanish /d-/ lenition
- 3. Data and methods
- 3.1 Speakers
- 3.2 Materials
- 3.3 Recording
- 3.4 Acoustic measurements
- 4. Results
- 4.1 Variation
- 4.2 Variation & FRC_approx
- 4.2.1 Relative strength of [d] articulations
- 4.2.2 Relative strength of approximant realizations [ð]
- 4.2.3 Linear modeling of onset variation
- 5. Discussion
- Acknowledgements
- References
- A usage-based account for the historical reflexes of ain’t in AAE
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Linguistic status of ain’t in English overall
- 2.1 Distribution of ain’t in AAE
- 3. Method and sources
- 4. Data
- 5. Discussion
- 5.1 General
- 6. Analysis
- 6.1 Present-tense ain’t
- 6.2 Underdetermined ain’t
- 6.3 Undetermination and linguistic complexity
- 7. The divergence hypothesis and usage-based grammar: A conclusion
- Primary resourses
- References
- Gradient conventionalization of the Spanish expression of ‘becoming’ quedar(se) + ADJ in seven centuries
- Introduction
- Previous examinations of verbs of ‘becoming’
- Quedarse + ADJ in eight centuries
- Operationalization in corpus linguistics
- Conventionalized Instances of Constructions (CICs)
- The Conventionalization Index
- Previous usage
- Number of works
- CIC threshold
- Overall normalized frequency
- The case of quedar(se) solo ‘to be left alone’
- The case of the quedar(se) alegre / satisfecho ‘to be left happy/satisfied’ clusters
- Concluding remarks
- References
- The evidence add ups
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1 Errors of interest, and theoretical background
- 1.1.1 Full affix shifts
- 1.1.2 Double-marked affixes
- 1.1.3 No-marking errors
- 1.2 Predictions, and quantitative corpus metrics
- 1.1 Errors of interest, and theoretical background
- 2. Task design
- 2.1 Materials and stimulus design
- 2.1.1 Frequency x Mutual Dependency bins
- 2.1.2 Bigram features matched across bins
- 2.1.3 Bigram stimuli and distractors
- 2.2 Participants and experiment setup
- 2.3 Results and discussion: Affix shifts and other affixation errors on bigram stimuli
- 2.3.1 Participant accuracy
- 2.3.2 Overview of errors: Affix shifts, double-marking errors, no-marking errors
- 2.1 Materials and stimulus design
- 3. Data and analysis
- 3.1 Post hoc analysis: Examining components of the MD metric
- 4. Discussion and conclusion
- References
- 1. Introduction
- look up about
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Background
- 2.1 ‘Phrasal-Prepositional Verb’ interpretations
- 2.2 Lexicalization
- 2.3 Usage-based processes
- 2.3.1 Chunking
- 2.3.2 Holistic and shallow processing
- 3. Data collection and method
- 4. Analysis
- 4.1 ‘Look up about’ as a lexical item
- 4.2 Development of Multi-Word ‘look up about’
- 5. Conclusions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- About the authors
- Index