Grammatical Categories: Variation in Romance Languages (Cambridge Studies in Linguistics Book 128) by M. Rita Manzini

Grammatical Categories: Variation in Romance Languages (Cambridge Studies in Linguistics Book 128)

M. Rita Manzini
373 pages
Cambridge University Press
Mar 2011
Hardcover
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Grammatical categories (e.g. complementizer, negation, auxiliary, case) are some of the most important building blocks of syntax and morphology. Categorization therefore poses fundamental questions about grammatical structures and about the lexicon from which they are built. Adopting a 'lexicalist' stance, the authors argue that lexical items are not epiphenomena, but really represent the mapping of sound to meaning (and vice versa) that classical conceptions imply. Their rule-governed combination creates words, phrases and sentences - structured by the 'categories' that are the object of the present inquiry. They argue that the distinction between functional and non-functional categories, between content words and inflections, is not as deeply rooted in grammar as is often thought. In their argumentation they lay the emphasis on empirical evidence, drawn mainly from dialectal variation in the Romance languages, as well as from Albanian.
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About this book
Pages 373
Publisher Cambridge University...
Published 2011
Readers 0