Studies in Constraint-Based Lexicalism: Mixed Categories in the Hierarchical Lexicon (Paperback)

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Management number 231184850 Release Date 2026/06/18 List Price $13.70 Model Number 231184850
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Mixed category constructions like the English verbal gerund involve words that seem to be central members of more that one part of speech. This poses a problem for the standard view of syntactic categories. <p>This book presents a novel analysis of this and similar mixed category constructions in languages including Quechua, Tibetan, Arabic, Fijian, Dagaare, and Jacaltec. Under this analysis, Robert P. Malouf shows that verbal gerunds share the selectional properties of verbs and the distributional properties of nouns. He further shows that since different dimensions of grammatical information can vary independently, the behavior of mixed categories creates no paradox. These dimensions are in principle independent. However, certain types of mixed categories are quite common in the world's languages, while others are rare or nonexistent. The book discusses how cross-linguistic variation can be accounted for by a lexical categorial prototype. By stating these prototypes as default constraints in a hierarchy of lexical information, Malouf argues that one can bring insights from cognitive and functional approaches to linguistics into a formal analysis, thus building on the strengths of both approaches.</p>

Mixed category constructions like the English verbal gerund involve words that seem to be central members of more that one part of speech. This poses a problem for the standard view of syntactic categories.

This book presents a novel analysis of this and similar mixed category constructions in languages including Quechua, Tibetan, Arabic, Fijian, Dagaare, and Jacaltec. Under this analysis, Robert P. Malouf shows that verbal gerunds share the selectional properties of verbs and the distributional properties of nouns. He further shows that since different dimensions of grammatical information can vary independently, the behavior of mixed categories creates no paradox. These dimensions are in principle independent. However, certain types of mixed categories are quite common in the world's languages, while others are rare or nonexistent. The book discusses how cross-linguistic variation can be accounted for by a lexical categorial prototype. By stating these prototypes as default constraints in a hierarchy of lexical information, Malouf argues that one can bring insights from cognitive and functional approaches to linguistics into a formal analysis, thus building on the strengths of both approaches.
Book format Paperback
Fiction/nonfiction Non-Fiction
Genre Nonfiction
Publication date June, 2000
Pages 182
Series title Studies in Constraint-Based Lexicalism
Number in series 90
Edition 74
Publisher Center for the Study of Language and Inf
Original languages English
Language English
Edu focus Language Arts
Educational level Higher
Binding type Perfect Binding
Assembled product dimensions (l x w x h) 9.00 x 6.00 x 0.40 Inches
Assembled product weight 0.59 lb
Bisac subject heading Grammar & Punctuation, Linguistics - General

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