基本説明
形式と意味の関連を、慣用や歴史、生物進化といった言語外の恣意性に委ねるのでなく、文法的形態素(統語的定項)が常に意味的定項を表示するという合成性仮説を支持し、簡明な代数学的構造から新たな言語普遍性を提案する。
Aims to provide the most straightforward definitions of the constructions present in human languages, together with a compositional semantics. A simple generative approach induces a natural algebraic notion of structure.
Full Description
Without assuming arbitrary restrictions on grammar notation at the outset, 'Bare Grammars' aim to provide the most straightforward definitions of the constructions present in human languages, together with a compositional semantics. A simple generative approach is presented which induces a natural algebraic notion of structure, with the surprising result that not only classical syntactic relations (like c-command) but also certain morphological relations concerning identity of particular morphemes (e.g. case markers) are properly structural. Formal models of case marking, verb voice, anaphora, are considered, and linguistic universals are proposed that do not assume any kind of structural isomorphism between languages. A strong form of compositionality is defended, together with the hypothesis that grammatical morphemes ('syntactic constants') always denote semantic constants, revealing that the relation between form and meaning is not subject to arbitrary dictates of linguistic convention, history, and accidents of human biology.
Contents
1. Introduction; 2. Little Korean: nominal case marking; 3. Free word order languages and second position clitics; 4. Digression: some familiar structures; 5. Little Batak: verbal case marking; 6. Little Inuit: simultaneous verb and noun marking; 7. Little Spanish: simple agreement; 8. Little Icelandic: quirky case; 9. Relations between form and meaning; 10. Elaborations; Index.