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A gradualist view of word meaning in language acquisition and language use Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2022-08-02 EVE V. CLARK
For both children and adults, communicating with each other effectively depends on having enough knowledge about particular entities, actions, or relations to understand and produce the words being used. Speakers draw on conventional meanings shared with their interlocutors, but do they share every detail of word meaning? They need not have identical, or fully specified, representations for the meanings
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The interaction of discourse markers and prosody in rhetorical questions in German Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2022-07-13 NICOLE DEHÉ, DANIELA WOCHNER, MARIEKE EINFELDT
Recent research has shown that rhetorical questions (RQs) have certain prosodic characteristics in terms of voice quality, tempo, and intonation, which distinguish them from genuine, information-seeking questions (ISQs). This paper focuses on the interaction between prosodic cues to rhetorical meaning on the one hand, and lexical and morpho-syntactic means, on the other, in German. The production experiment
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All TRs are not created equal – L1 and L2 perception of English cluster affrication Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2022-06-08 GEOFFREY SCHWARTZ
This paper describes a perception experiment with L1 Polish and L1 English listeners on the affrication of initial English /tr/ and /dr/ (TR) consonant clusters. The goal was to test phonological predictions formulated within the Onset Prominence (OP) framework. OP offers two distinct structural configurations for representing rising sonority onset clusters. One predicts synchronous cluster articulation
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Aggressively non-D-linked construction and ellipsis: A Direct Interpretation approach Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2022-06-03 JUNGSOO KIM, JONG-BOK KIM
The so-called aggressively non-D-linked construction (ANDC) involving wh-the-hell phrases like what the hell is of empirical and theoretical interest due to its complex morphosyntactic and semantic/pragmatic properties. This paper focuses on the construction in general as well as in ellipsis phenomena. We first explore its grammatical properties on the basis of attested corpus data and show that the
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Palatalisation can be quantity-sensitive: Dorsal Fricative Assimilation in Liverpool English Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2022-05-16 AMANDA CARDOSO, PATRICK HONEYBONE
This paper shows that the Liverpool English dorsal fricative, derived through the lenition of /k/, is subject to place of articulation assimilation, driven by the preceding vowel. This is similar to the vowel-driven aspects of typical perseverative Dorsal Fricative Assimilation (a type of palatalisation), as found, for example, in the German ich-Laut~ach-Laut alternation, where (among other things)
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Existential indefinite constructions, in the world and in Mainland Southeast Asia Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2022-05-13 JOHAN VAN DER AUWERA, QUAN NGUYEN HAI, VIPAS POTHIPATH, STEFANIE SIEBENHÜTTER
In some languages assertions about ‘somebody’ or ‘nobody’ are existential in a strong sense, i.e. they need or prominently allow an explicit syntactic marker of existence (‘there is’, ‘exist’). This paper presents a state-of-the-art typology of existential indefinite constructions and finds the typological understanding to be inconclusive in many respects. The paper responds to this inconclusiveness
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Romance pronominal clitics as pure heads Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2022-05-10 MARIA RITA MANZINI
Romance clitics are currently accounted for as DP arguments moved to functional head positions or as functional heads (AccVoice, etc.) licensing pro-DPs in argument position. I take the view that clitics are first merged as heads, projecting independently motivated categories on the functional spine of the sentence (φP, ApplP). I argue that they can satisfy theta relations without need for a pro associate
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Affixal rivalry and its purely semantic resolution among English derived adjectives Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2022-05-10 AKIKO NAGANO
This paper aims to fill in a long missing piece in the paradigmatic word-formation research: a set of rival affixes whose members are differentiated in meaning. We argue that such a set can be found in English derivational adjectivalization, in the affixal rivalry between the adjectivalizing suffixes -ed and -y. Using the traditional method of doublet comparison (Aronoff 1976, 2020), we reveal that
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When information structure exploits syntax: The relation between the loss of VO and scrambling in Dutch Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2022-05-06 TARA STRUIK, GERT-JAN SCHOENMAKERS
This paper addresses the relation between two types of word order variation in two stages of Dutch: OV/VO variation in historical Dutch and scrambling in present-day Dutch. Information structural considerations influence both types of word order variation, and we demonstrate by means of a comprehensive corpus study that they have a comparable pattern: given objects tend to appear earlier in the sentence
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Modelling non-specific linguistic variation in cognitive disorders Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2022-04-25 WOLFRAM HINZEN, MARTINA WILTSCHKO
Clinical linguistic diversity extends far beyond ‘specific language’ disorders, such as acquired aphasia or specific language impairment (SLI), to a large range of mental disorders that are not language-specific. As cognitive impairments are involved in the latter, models with an integrated approach to language and cognition can be useful for understanding and classifying the variation in question
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The Role of Word Recognition Factors and Lexical Stress in the Distribution of Consonants in Spanish, English and Dutch Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2022-04-11 D.P. VAN SOEREN
The distribution of labials and coronals within Spanish CVCVCV words and English and Dutch CVCVC words has been studied from a functional perspective and in fine detail. We argue that word recognition is key in the explanation of the results; as a word is pronounced, an increasing number of word candidates is eliminated, and consequently the beginning of the word has a higher communicative load than
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Telicization in Mandarin Chinese Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2022-04-04 QIANPING GU
This paper investigates aspectual meanings that resultative morphemes in Mandarin Chinese contribute to interpretations of the entire predicates, and in particular the culmination readings they bring out of the originally non-culminating accomplishments. Two resultative morphemes are studied: -wán and -diào. I argue that while both morphemes give rise to culmination readings, the culmination readings
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FOFC and what left-right asymmetries may tell us about syntactic structure building Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2022-04-01 HEDDE ZEIJLSTRA
In this paper, I demonstrate that a well-known left-right asymmetry, Biberauer, Holmberg and Roberts’s (2014) Final-over-Final Condition (FOFC), which these authors claim follows from Kayne’s Linear Correspondence Axiom (LCA), is actually better explained under a symmetric approach to syntactic structure building in tandem with the mechanism that underlies the constraints on rightward movement. Apart
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Case-matching effects under clausal ellipsis and the cue-based theory of sentence processing Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2022-03-16 JOANNA NYKIEL,JONG-BOK KIM,ROK SIM
This paper is concerned with case-matching effects under clausal ellipsis. We begin by considering available crosslinguistic data that indicate that variation in case marking on a fragment is delimited by the argument structure of the lexical head that assigns case to the fragment’s correlate in the antecedent clause. We then offer experimental evidence for a case-matching preference in Korean when
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Ivano Caponigro, Harold Torrence & Roberto Zavala Maldonado (eds.), Headless relative clauses in Mesoamerican languages. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2021. Pp. 584. Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2022-03-08 IRINA BURUKINA
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Noun class agreement in Kafire (Senufo): A Lexical-Functional Grammar account Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2022-02-23 TATIANA NIKITINA, SONGFOLO LACINA SILUÉ
A major challenge presented by noun class systems of Senufo languages is the non-trivial interaction between the agreement features of the noun phrase and the noun class specification on the head noun. In Kafire (Senufo, Côte d’Ivoire), demonstratives normally agree with the head noun independent of whether or not the head noun is modified by adjectives. Some adjectives, however, are exceptions to
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The syntax of peripheral adverbial clauses Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2022-01-13 LINDA BADAN,LILIANE HAEGEMAN
This paper explores the relation between the interpretations of while in English and mentre in Italian introducing adverbial clauses. Central while/mentre clauses express a temporal/aspectual modification of the proposition in the host clause. Peripheral while/mentre clauses make accessible a proposition from the discourse context enhancing the relevance of the host proposition. In one approach, clauses
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The syntax of inner aspect in Hungarian Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2022-01-10 ÉVA KARDOS, IMOLA-ÁGNES FARKAS
This paper is concerned with the syntactic representation of inner aspect in Hungarian. We contribute to the extant research on inner aspectual markers by providing an analysis of entailed versus implied telicity as well as the (non)maximality effects with which telic predicates are associated. Although we focus on the grammar of Hungarian, we also draw parallels between typologically different languages
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Token frequency as a determinant of morphological change Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-12-22 HELEN SIMS-WILLIAMS
This paper demonstrates that morphological change tends to involve the replacement of low frequency forms in inflectional paradigms by innovative forms based on high frequency forms, using Greek data involving the diachronic reorganisation of verbal inflection classes. A computational procedure is outlined for generating a possibility space of morphological changes which can be represented as analogical
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Raising and matching in Pharasiot Greek relative clauses: A diachronic reconstruction Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-12-21 METIN BAGRIACIK, LIEVEN DANCKAERT
This paper studies the structure and origin of prenominal and postnominal restrictive relative clauses in Pharasiot Greek. Though both patterns are finite and introduced by the invariant complementizer tu, they differ in two important respects. First, corpus data reveal that prenominal relatives are older than their postnominal counterparts. Second, in the present-day language only prenominal relatives
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The interpretational preferences of null and overt pronouns in Chinese Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-11-29 AILI ZHANG, NAYOUNG KWON
We report three reading comprehension experiments investigating the interpretational preferences and processing of pro and overt pronouns in Chinese, a ‘discourse-oriented’ pro-drop language (Huang 1984). Our offline rating experiments showed that both pro and overt pronouns were subject-based, but the preference for the subject antecedents was stronger with pro than with overt pronouns. In addition
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Locative Inversion, PP Topicalization, and Weak Crossover in English Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-11-29 BENJAMIN BRUENING
The literature on locative inversion in English currently disputes whether locative inversion differs from PP topicalization in permitting a quantifier in the fronted PP to bind a pronoun in the subject. In order to resolve this dispute, this paper runs two experiments on Amazon Mechanical Turk, one an acceptability judgment task and the other a forced-choice task. Both find that PP topicalization
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Why do we need another book about unbounded dependencies? A review article on Chaves & Putnam’s Unbounded Dependency Constructions Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-11-24 ROBERT D. BORSLEY
Unbounded dependencies (UDs), in wh-interrogatives, relative clauses and other constructions, have been a major focus of syntactic research for more than half a century. The most widely assumed approach analyzes them in terms of movement and views island phenomena as largely a matter of syntax. Both these positions are problematic. Moreover, they stem from assumptions that have been at the heart of
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Gender asymmetries in ellipsis: An experimental comparison of markedness and frequency accounts in English Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-11-12 JON SPROUSE, TROY MESSICK, JONATHAN DAVID BOBALJIK
Bobaljik & Zocca (2011) argue that ellipsis reveals the existence of (at least) two classes of gender-paired nouns: in the actor/actress class, the grammatically feminine form is specified for conceptual gender, while the unaffixed form is unspecified, exemplifying the classic markedness asymmetry (Jakobson 1932); in the prince/princess class, both forms are specified for conceptual gender. Here we
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John Russell Rickford, Variation, versatility and change in sociolinguistics and creole studies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019. Pp. xxii + 366. Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-11-04 FABIOLA HENRI
Andersen, Gisle. 1998. The pragmatic marker like from a relevance-theoretic perspective. In Andreas H. Jucker & Yael Ziv (eds.), Discourse markers: Description and theory, 147–170. Amsterdam & Philadelphia, PA: John Benjamins. Bosker, Hans Rutger, Esperanza Badaya &Martin Corley. 2021. Discourse markers activate their, like, cohort competitors. Discourse Processes, DOI:10.1080/0163853X.2021.1924000
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Bernd Heine, Gunther Kaltenböck, Tania Kuteva & Haiping Long, The rise of discourse markers. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2021. Pp. xi + 308. Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-10-29 ERIC MÉLAC
The Rise of Discourse Markers, by Bernd Heine, Gunther Kaltenböck, Tania Kuteva and Haiping Long, is an outstanding reference work for any linguist interested in discourse and language change. It provides a review of the scattered literature describing the role and evolution of discourse markers (henceforth DMs) in several languages, as well as a clear synthesis of the most recent developments in the
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The semantics of conversion nouns and -ing nominalizations: A quantitative and theoretical perspective Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-10-15 ROCHELLE LIEBER, INGO PLAG
This paper addresses a fundamental problem of derivational morphology: which meanings are possible for the words of a given morphological category, which forms can be chosen to express a given meaning, and what is the role of the base in these mappings of form and meaning? In a broad empirical study we examine the extent to which two types of nominalizations in English – conversion nouns and -ing nominalizations
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A syntactically-driven approach to indefiniteness, specificity and anti-specificity in Romance Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-10-11 M. TERESA ESPINAL, SONIA CYRINO
In this paper we present an original approach to analyze the compositionality of indefinite expressions in Romance by investigating the relevance of their syntactic distribution in relation to their meaning. This approach has the advantage of allowing us to explore the question of how syntactic structure can determine the meaning of different forms of indefiniteness. To that end, we postulate a common
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A multilingual corpus study of the competition between past and perfect in narrative discourse Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-10-08 MARTIJN VAN DER KLIS, BERT LE BRUYN, HENRIËTTE DE SWART
The western European present perfect is subject to substantial crosslinguistic variation. The literature, however, focuses on individual languages or on comparisons of a restricted number of languages. We piece together the puzzle and do so in a data-driven way by comparing the use of the present perfect through a parallel corpus based on the French novel L’Étranger and its translations in Italian
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Yusuke Kubota & Robert D. Levine, Type-Logical Syntax. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2020. Pp. xxii + 397. Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-10-05 CHRIS BARKER
This terrific book is open-access! Everyone should download and read at least Chapter 2, ‘Hybrid Type-Logical Categorial Grammar’, which describes the approach in general terms, and then download whichever empirical applications are of most interest. Kubota and Levine report on a decade of heavy lifting in their efforts to develop Hybrid Type-Logical Categorial Grammar (Hybrid TLCG), which they use
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Licensing null arguments in recipes across languages Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-09-29 ILEANA PAUL, DIANE MASSAM
While much of the literature on recipe contexts has focused on English and the availability of null definite patients, this paper shows that both null agents and null patients are possible in recipes in a range of typologically and genetically diverse languages. It is proposed that null agents in recipes arise due to a variety of syntactic strategies, but null patients are uniformly licensed via a
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Implicational generalizations in morphological syncretism: The role of communicative biases Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-07-16 BENJAMIN STORME
Cross-linguistic generalizations about grammatical contexts favoring syncretism often have an implicational form. This paper shows that this is expected if (i) morphological paradigms are required to be both as small and as unambiguous as possible, (ii) languages may prioritize these requirements differently, and (iii) probability distributions for grammatical features interacting in syncretic patterns
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Local versus long-distance bound implicit arguments of inalienable relational nouns in Chinese Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-07-14 ALAN HEZAO KE, ACRISIO PIRES
This paper argues that inalienable relational nouns in Mandarin Chinese, specifically kinship nouns (KNs, e.g. father, sister) and body-part nouns (BPNs, e.g. head, face), have an implicit reflexive argument. Based on a syntactic comparison between KNs, BPNs, locally and long-distance bound reflexives, we argue that the implicit reflexive arguments of BPNs must be locally bound, whereas that of KNs
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Prosodic prominence in a stressless language: An acoustic investigation of Indonesian Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-06-29 ANGELIKI ATHANASOPOULOU, IRENE VOGEL, NADYA PINCUS
Although it has been proposed that all languages may have some lexical stress property, recent studies of (Standard) Indonesian have concluded, based primarily on perception, that lexical stress is not present in this language. While it is philosophically problematic to prove the non-existence of a phenomenon, we examine data from a large-scale production study for both direct and indirect evidence
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Antonio Pareja-Lora, María Blume, Barbara C. Lust & Christian Chiarcos (eds.), Development of linguistic linked open data resources for collaborative data-intensive research in the language sciences. Cambridge: The MIT Press, 2019. Pp. xxi + 247. Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-06-07 FRANCES GILLIS-WEBBER
Linked Data is a set of principles for making heterogenous data collections accessible on theWorldWideWeb.Within the context of linguistics, where diverse data such as annotated corpora, terminologies, and language data of little-known languages are produced, these linguistic datasets can be represented in LinkedData, thus facilitating openness and reuse. The principles of Linked Data, published in
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Anne Breitbarth, Christopher Lucas & David Willis, The history of negation in the languages of Europe and the Mediterranean, vol. II: Patterns and processes (Oxford Studies in Diachronic and Historical Linguistics 40). Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020. Pp. xiv + 292. Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-06-04 HANNAH GIBSON
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Taking time with the tough-construction Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-06-04 JOHN GLUCKMAN
I provide a syntactic analysis of the take-time construction (It took an hour to complete the test). The investigation provides insight into well-known issues concerning the related tough-construction. Using a battery of standard syntactic diagnostics, I conclude that the take-time construction and the tough-construction require a predication analysis of the antecedent-gap chain, not a movement analysis
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Clifton Pye, The comparative method of language acquisition research. Chicago, IL: The University of Chicago Press, 2017. Pp. xiv + 304. Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-06-01 YILMAZ KÖYLÜ
Berners-Lee, Tim. 2006. Linked Data. https://www.w3.org/DesignIssues/LinkedData.html (accessed 10 March 2021). Berners-Lee, Tim, James Hendler & Ora Lassila. 2001. The Semantic Web. Scientific American 284, 34–43. Chiarcos, Christian. n.d. Teach yourself LLOD. http://acoli.informatik.uni-frankfurt.de/resources/llod/ (accessed 10 March 2021). Chiarcos, Christian, Christian Fäth & Frank Abromeit. 2020
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Giuseppe Samo, A criterial approach to the cartography of V2. Amsterdam & Philadelphia, PA: John Benjamins, 2019. Pp. xi + 215. Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-05-31 XU CHEN
However, there seems to be a great challenge to the cartographic program when the strategy is extended to Verb Second (henceforth, V2) languages like German, which require the inflected verb to be in the second linear position. That there is only one element allowed to precede the inflected verb seems to imply that there is only one possible functional projection populated in the left periphery, which
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Duality of control in gerundive complements of P Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-05-18 IDAN LANDAU
Sentences like They tricked him into believing them and They charged him with abandoning them raise interesting issues for selection and control. We show that these two sentences exemplify two distinct classes, subsuming P-gerund constructions that are formed with seven distinct prepositions: implicative vs. nonimplicative constructions. The first class displays a cluster of restrictions, both syntactic
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Regular and compositional aspects of NPN constructions Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-03-16 TORODD KINN
The article proposes a novel analysis of NPN constructions, exemplified by English expressions like back to back and year after year. An NPN is typically composed of two identical bare singular count nouns with a preposition between them. Previous research tends to treat NPNs as highly idiosyncratic. While acknowledging some idiosyncrasies, the present contribution shows that NPNs exhibit a considerable
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Samuel Schindler Anna Drożdżowicz & Karen Brøcker (eds.), Linguistic intuitions: Evidence and method. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020. Pp. xiii + 320 Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-02-09 GABE DUPRE
Richard Feynman famously claimed that philosophy of science is as useful for science as ornithology is for birds. Perhaps linguists are simply more self-reflective than most avians, but this has never seemed true in linguistics. On the contrary, in the modern history of linguistics, linguists have not merely paid attention to philosophical debates concerning the relations between evidence, theory and
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Ways of looking: Lexicalizing visual paths in verbs Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-02-08 EWELINA WNUK
The packaging of meaning in verbs varies widely across languages since verbs are free to encode different aspects of an event. At the same time, languages tend to display recurrent preferences in lexicalization, e.g. verb-framing vs. satellite-framing in motion. It has been noted, however, that the lexicalization patterns in motion are not carried over to the domain of vision, since gaze trajectory
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Elliot Murphy, The oscillatory nature of language. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020. Pp. xiii + 321. Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-02-01 JORDI MARTORELL
As David Poeppel and David Embick explain (Poeppel & Embick 2005, Embick & Poeppel 2015), theoretical linguistics and psycho/neurolinguistics generally work with conceptual units of disparate granularity, often assuming that their research programs are mutually independent following rigid interpretations of the classical distinctions between COMPETENCE and PERFORMANCE (Chomsky 1965) or COMPUTATIONAL
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Jingyang Jiang & Haitao Liu (eds.), Quantitative analysis of dependency structures (Quantitative Linguistics 72). Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton, 2018. Pp. xii + 368. Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-01-22 HAORAN ZHU,LEI LEI
Dependency grammar captures the hierarchical aspects of syntactic organization. According to dependency grammar, a sentence is regarded as a tree that originates from the root verb and develops into a hierarchical structure. Each node of the tree represents a word, and a node is dependent on its parent node (i.e. the governor). In recent years, both qualitative and quantitative studies on dependency
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Veronika Hegedűs & Irene Vogel (eds.), Approaches to Hungarian 16: Papers from the 2017 Budapest Conference. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 2020. Pp. 233. Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-01-21 ANIKÓ LIPTÁK
The 16th volume of the Approaches to Hungarian series (currently published by John Benjamins) contains 10 papers selected from presentations at the 13th International Conference on the Structure of Hungarian (ICSH13), held in Budapest in June 2017, organized by the (then) Research Institute for Linguistics of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. The papers presented in this volume discuss various topics
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Variable embedded agent in Sason Arabic Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-01-18 FARUK AKKUŞ
The paper investigates the syntax and semantics of an indirect causative construction, ‘make’ causatives, in Sason Arabic with a focus on the syntax of the embedded structure and the status of the implicit embedded agent. On the basis of several diagnostics, the study demonstrates that ‘make’ embeds an agentive VoiceP, which also manifests an active-passive alternation despite the absence of any morphological
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Fragments and structural identity on a direct interpretation approach Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-01-13 JOANNA NYKIEL, JONG-BOK KIM
This paper examines the relationship between merger and sprouting fragments, which are typically taken to involve clausal ellipsis. We argue that structural identity constraints on fragments and their correlates should, where appropriate, make reference to the argument structure of lexical heads in the antecedent clauses. Our proposal is spelled out as part of a direct interpretation approach to clausal
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Catalan focus markers as discourse particles Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-01-13 ANDREAS TROTZKE, LAIA MAYOL
In this paper, we investigate focus markers in Catalan that can take on discourse-particle readings. We focus on two Catalan elements that have not been studied from a formal linguistics perspective so far: the focus adverb precisament ‘precisely’ and the focus particle també ‘also’. We demonstrate that these elements feature interpretations that we identify as a type of meaning familiar from discourse
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Mismatching nominals and the small clause hypothesis Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-01-08 PAUL ROGER BASSONG
I propose a comprehensive analysis of what has been commonly referred in the literature to as split, discontinuous noun phrases or split topicalization. Based on data from Basaá, a Narrow Bantu language spoken in Cameroon, I partly capitalize on previous authors such as Mathieu (2004), Mathieu & Sitaridou (2005) and Ott (2015a), who propose that this morphosyntactic phenomenon involves two syntactically
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Explaining grammatical coding asymmetries: Form–frequency correspondences and predictability Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2021-01-08 MARTIN HASPELMATH
This paper claims that a wide variety of grammatical coding asymmetries can be explained as adaptations to the language users’ needs, in terms of frequency of use, predictability and coding efficiency. I claim that all grammatical oppositions involving a minimal meaning difference and a significant frequency difference are reflected in a universal coding asymmetry, i.e. a cross-linguistic pattern in
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Rebecca Woods & Sam Wolfe (eds.), Rethinking verb second (Rethinking Comparative Syntax). Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020. Pp. xxii + 956. Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2020-12-23 Brian Hsu
eliminate (or enhance) the distinction by tapping into empirical findings. As L2 pragmatics enters its fifth decade, ecologically-oriented researchers are compelled to search for solutions to issues with strong theoretical and pedagogical implications ‘in the context of doing good in the lives of real people’ (156). Although it might sound a little too optimistic, readers would feel inspired to join
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Ditransitivity hierarchy, semantic compatibility and the realization of recipients in Korean dative constructions Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2020-12-22 HANJUNG LEE
It has been observed that a subset of dative verbs that can express causation of possession such as cwu- ‘give’, ceykongha- ‘offer’ and cikupha- ‘pay’ may be found in the double accusative frame as well as in the DAT(ive)-ACC(usative) frame in Korean. These verbs contrast with transfer of possession verbs such as kennay- ‘hand’ and phal- ‘sell’ and verbs of sending and throwing, which are found in
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Insertion and deletion in Northern English (ng): Interacting innovations in the life cycle of phonological processes Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2020-12-15 GEORGE BAILEY
In north-western varieties of British English the historical process of ng-coalescence that simplified nasal + stop clusters in words like wrong and singer never ran to completion, with surface variation between [ŋ] and [ŋɡ] remaining to this day. This paper presents an empirical study of this synchronic variation, specifically to test predictions made by the life cycle of phonological processes; a
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On the nature of the lexicon: The status of rich lexical meanings Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2020-12-10 LOTTE HOGEWEG, AGUSTIN VICENTE
Both in linguistics and in psycholinguistics there is some debate about how rich or thin lexico-semantic representations are. Traditionally, in formal semantics but also in philosophy of language as well as in cognitive pragmatics, lexical meanings have been thought to be simple stable denotations or functions. In this paper, we present and discuss a number of interpretational phenomena of which the
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Beavers John and Andrew Koontz-Garboden, The Roots of Verbal Meaning. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020. Pp. xvii + 255 Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2020-12-07 Josep Ausensi
This monograph presents a novel approach to the types of meaning that roots (in the DistributedMorphology sense; seeHalle&Marantz 1993) can have in terms of truthconditional content. The focus of the monograph is on the so-called division of labor between functional structure and roots, i.e. the assumption in current (syntactic) theories of event structure that the meanings contributed by event templates
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The road not taken: The Sound Pattern of Russian and the history of contrast in phonology Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2020-12-07 B. ELAN DRESHER, DANIEL CURRIE HALL
This article examines a turning point in the history of the theory of phonological distinctive features. In Morris Halle’s (1959) The Sound Pattern of Russian, features are organized into a contrastive hierarchy designed to minimize the number of specified features. Redundancy rules, however, ensure that the resulting underspecification has no real phonological consequences and, in subsequent generative
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Resultatives, goal PPs, and postverbal subjects: From Scotland to Belfast Journal of Linguistics (IF 1.381) Pub Date : 2020-12-04 ANDREW WEIR
This paper investigates postverbal imperative subjects (e.g., get you to school), ungrammatical in standard English but grammatical in certain contexts in dialects of Scottish and Belfast English. Henry (1995) reports that unaccusative verbs generally allow postverbal subjects in Belfast English, but in the Scottish English (ScotE) dialect considered here, only a very restricted subset of verbs allow