Product Description
This collection of selected papers addresses theoretical and empirical issues related to lexical categories, categorization and category change. Any grammatical description makes use of parts-of-speech. The proper set of lexical categories and the definitions of their properties cross-linguistically has been a remnant issue in linguistics since the beginnings of grammatical description. Besides, the traditional classification of lexical classes with their morphological, syntactic and/or interpretational properties has led to the emergence of mixed categories, which are problematic in linguistic theory, since the current systems, either feature-based or syntactic, have no means to express fuzziness. This volume addresses both these issues in two thematic parts. The first part, Categories and categorization, consists of papers that tackle the problem of defining categories and mixed-categories and its reflex on the inventory. The second part, Issues in category change, comprises investigations on category change, focusing on nominalizations, which is the test ground for a theory of category change and word formation. The papers included in this part discuss, among others, the similarities and mismatches between derived nominals and the corresponding verbs in terms of argument realization and eventive interpretation. The languages investigated in the volume include English, French, German, Greek, Japanese, Norwegian, Romanian, Russian, Spanish, and Swedish. This book targets researchers and advanced students in theoretical linguistics.
About the Author
Gianina Iordachioaia is a Postdoctoral Researcher in the Collaborative Research Center 732, Incremental Specification in Context, at the University of Stuttgart. She received a PhD from the University of Tubingen in 2009. Her current work concerns the morphology-syntax and the syntax-semantics interface of nominalizations derived from verbs and adjectives. Isabelle Roy is an Associate Professor of Linguistics at the University Paris 8 and holds a Chaire d'Excellence in First Language Acquisition. She received her PhD from the University of Southern California in 2006. She is the author of Nonverbal Predication (Oxford University Press, 2013) and the co-editor of the Recherches Linguistiques de Vincennes 45 issue on nominalizations. Kaori Takamine is a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology. In 2010, she received a PhD from the University of Tromso with a thesis entitled The Postpositional hierarchy and its mapping to clause structure in Japanese. Her current research includes nominal structure, deixis, adpositions, and adverbials.
Just click on START button on Telegram Bot