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The Oxford Handbook of Linguistic Interfaces
Edited by Gillian Ramchand and Charles Reiss
688 pages
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tables and figures
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246x171mm
978-0-19-924745-5
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Hardback
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22 February 2007
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This item is printed to order and supplied on a firm sale basis. Items which are printed to order are normally despatched and charged within 5-10 days.
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- A show-case of cutting-edge work in linguistics
- Written by the leading international scholars
- State-of-the-art guide for cross-disciplinary work on language
This state-of-the-art guide to some of the most exciting work in current linguistics explores how the core components of the language faculty interact. It examines how these interactions are reflected in linguistic and cognitive theory, considers what they reveal about the operations of language within the mind, and looks at their reflections in expression and communication. Leading international scholars present cutting-edge accounts of developments in the interfaces between phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, and pragmatics. They bring to bear a rich variety of methods and theoretical perspectives, focus on a broad array of issues and problems, and illustrate their arguments from a wide range of the world's languages.
After the editors' introduction to its structure, scope, and content, the book is divided into four parts. The first, Sound, is concerned with the interfaces between phonetics and phonology, phonology and morphology, and phonology and syntax. Part II, Structure, considers the interactions of syntax with morphology, semantics, and the lexicon, and explores the status of the word and its representional status in the mind. Part III, Meaning, revisits the syntax-semantics interface from the perspective of compositionality, and looks at issues concerned with intonation, discourse, and context. The authors in the final part of the book, General Architectural Concerns, examine work on Universal Grammar, the overall model of language, and linguistic and associated theories of language and
cognition.
All scholars and advanced students of language will value this book, whether they are in linguistics, cognitive science, philosophy, artificial intelligence, computational science, or informatics.Readership: Scholars and advanced students of language, whether in linguistics, cognitive science, philosophy, artificial intelligence, computational science, and informatics
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Edited by Gillian Ramchand, Professor of Linguistics at the University of Tromsø, and Charles Reiss, Associate Professor of Linguistics at Concordia University Contributors: Gillian Ramchand, University of Tromsø Charles Reiss, Concordia University Peter Ackema, University of Edinburgh David Beaver, Stanford University Daniel Büring, University of California Cedric Boeckx, Harvard University Andrew Dolbey, UC Berkeley Gorka Elordieta, University of the Basque Country David Embick, University of Pennsylvania Mark Hale, Concordia
University James Higginbotham, University of Southern California Madelyn Kissock, Oakland University Marit Julien, Lund University Jonas Kuhn, Saarbrücken Ad Neeleman, University College London Ralf Noyer, University of Pennsylvania Orhan Orgun, UC Davis Christopher Potts, University of Massachusetts Sara Thomas Rosen, University of Kansas James M. Scobbie, Queen Margaret University College Mark Steedman, University of Edinburgh Thomas Stewart, Truman State University Gregory Stump, Ohio State University Peter Svenonius, Univresity of Tromsø Juan Uriagereka, Edwin Williams, Princeton University Henk
Zeevat, University of Amsterdam
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1: Gillian Ramchand and Charles Reiss: Introduction
Part I Sound
2: James Scobbie: Interface and Overlap in Phonetics and Phonology
3: Charles Reiss: Modularity in the SOund Domain
4: Mark Hale and Madelyn Kissock: The Phonetics-Phonology Interface and the Acquisition of Perseverant Underspecification
5: Orhan Orgun and Andrew Dolbey: Phonology-Morphology Interaction in a COnstraint-based Framework
6: Gorka Elordieta: Segmental Phonology and Syntactic Structure
Part II Structure
7: Sara Rosen: Structured Events, Structured Discourse
8: Marit Julien: On the Relation Between Morphology and Syntax
9: Peter Svenious: 1...3-2
10: David Embick and Ralf Noyer: Distributed Morphology and the Syntax/Morphology Interface
11: Peter Ackema and Ad Neeleman: Morphology does not equal Syntax
12: Edwin Williams: Dumping Lexicalism
13: Thomas Stewart and Gregory Stump: Paradigm Function Morphology and the Morphology-Syntax
Part III Meaning
14: James Higginbotham: Some Consequences of Compositionality
15: Daniel Büring: Semantics, Intonation and Information Structure
16: Christopher Potts: Conventional Implicatures: A Distinguished Class of Meanings
17: David Beaver and Henk Zeevat: Accommodation
Part IV Architecture
18: Cedric Boeckx and Juan Uriagereka: Minimalism
19: Mark Steedman: The Computation
20: Jonas Kuhn: Constraint Based Grammar
The Authors
Language Index
Subject and Name Index
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