Complementation and Case Grammar
Title | Complementation and Case Grammar PDF eBook |
Author | Martti Juhani Rudanko |
Publisher | SUNY Press |
Pages | 220 |
Release | 1989-01-01 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 9780887069314 |
This book offers a new and compendious account of important verbal patterns in present-day English. Serving as a central source of data, it updates and refines earlier research contributing to the syntactic and semantic description of English. Rudanko establishes an original framework, and systematically analyzes patterns of complementation using the tool of case grammar. The examination of Control, or EQUI, is a common theme and an important problem for transformationalists, and English syntacticians will value Rudanko's work on infinitive complements.
Complementation and Case Grammar
Title | Complementation and Case Grammar PDF eBook |
Author | Juhani Rudanko |
Publisher | SUNY Press |
Pages | 188 |
Release | 1989-07-03 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 9780887069321 |
This book offers a new and compendious account of important verbal patterns in present-day English. Serving as a central source of data, it updates and refines earlier research contributing to the syntactic and semantic description of English. Rudanko establishes an original framework, and systematically analyzes patterns of complementation using the tool of case grammar. The examination of Control, or EQUI, is a common theme and an important problem for transformationalists, and English syntacticians will value Rudankos work on infinitive complements.
Case Grammar Theory
Title | Case Grammar Theory PDF eBook |
Author | Walter A. Cook |
Publisher | Georgetown University Press |
Pages | 240 |
Release | 1989 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 9780878402762 |
By analyzing seven concrete models, the author examines each in regard to its logical structure, list of cases, derivational system, and use of covert case roles.
Case Grammar
Title | Case Grammar PDF eBook |
Author | Walter Anthony Cook |
Publisher | |
Pages | 240 |
Release | 1979 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN |
The case grammar model is essentially a description of predicates and the arguments required by the meaning of those predicates in the semantic description of sentences. By probing into semantic structures, case systems can relate one surface structure to many semantic structures and one semantic structure to many surface structures. It is in the area of explaining paraphrase and ambiguity that the model is able to establish relationships which cannot be established on the basis of syntax alone. Yet these semantic realities have important syntactic correlates and help to reveal regularities not otherwise apparent. This volume contains thirteen papers, published between 1970 and 1978, which trace the development of the case grammar matrix model, its relation to tagmemics, generative semantics, and interpretive semantics, and its application to such areas as the analysis of literature and stylistics -- Page 4 of cover.
Prepositions and Complement Clauses
Title | Prepositions and Complement Clauses PDF eBook |
Author | Juhani Rudanko |
Publisher | State University of New York Press |
Pages | 224 |
Release | 1996-02-15 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 1438418221 |
This book provides a pioneering and data-oriented investigation of the syntax and semantics of important prepositional complementation patterns dependent on the prepositions in, to, at , on, with, and of in current English. The investigation is based on a sample of matrix verbs that governs the pattern of sentential complementation. The data includes the Brown and LOB corpora, English dictionaries and grammars, and the intuitions of native speakers. Rudanko sets up taxonomies of matrix verbs and argues that they often can be based on relatively few core classes. He questions whether verbs selecting a pattern also select other patterns of sentential complementation. Noting the quantity and quality of such alternation, he observes how differences in form are linked to differences in meaning. The study of relevant matrix verbs, supplemented with discussion of alternation and other syntactic and semantic properties of the patterns, points to the semantic functions that are associated typically with each pattern of complementation.
Non-finite Complementation
Title | Non-finite Complementation PDF eBook |
Author | Thomas Egan |
Publisher | BRILL |
Pages | 444 |
Release | 2015-06-29 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 940120554X |
This book presents a comprehensive guide to the way speakers of British English use infinitive and –ing clauses as verbal complements. It contains details of the non-finite complementation patterns of over 300 matrix verbs, with a particular emphasis on verbs that occur with more than one type of non-finite complement. Drawing upon data from the British National Corpus, the author shows that some of the views which are to be found in the existing literature on these sorts of clauses are in conflict with the evidence of actual usage. He also shows that there is actually much more regularity in this area than has often been taken to be the case. Moreover, this regularity is shown to be motivated by cognitive-functional factors. An appendix contains details of the relative frequency of all of the constructions dealt with in the study, together with an example of each of them. The book is of interest to language teachers as well as linguists, both theoretical and applied.
Verbal Complement Clauses
Title | Verbal Complement Clauses PDF eBook |
Author | Claudia Felser |
Publisher | John Benjamins Publishing |
Pages | 302 |
Release | 1999-01-01 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 9789027227461 |
This monograph examines the syntax of bare infinitival and participial complements of perception verbs in English and other European languages, and investigates the general conditions under which verbal complement clauses are licensed. The introductory chapter is followed by an overview of the major syntactic and semantic characteristics of non-finite complements of perception verbs in English. The third chapter presents an analysis within the framework of Chomsky's (1995) Minimalist Program according to which event-denoting complements are minimally realised as projections of an aspectual head. In the next chapter, it is argued that verbs capable of licensing aspectual complement clauses must be able to function as a special type of control predicate, an assumption which is shown to account for a number of seemingly unrelated properties of the constructions under consideration. The final chapter examines syntactically reduced clausal complements from a cross-linguistic perspective, showing that Southern Romance languages differ from Germanic ones with respect to the availability of 'bare' aspectual complement clauses, a difference that is attributed to morphological properties of verbs in these languages.