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Textur des Lexikons: Relationale Morphologie und die parallele Architektur,...-

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Book Title
Texture of the Lexicon : Relational Morphology and the Parallel A
ISBN
9780198827900
Publication Year
2020
Type
Textbook
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Publication Name
Texture of the Lexicon : Relational Morphology and the Parallel Architecture
Item Height
1in
Author
Jenny Audring, Ray Jackendoff
Item Length
10in
Publisher
Oxford University Press, Incorporated
Item Width
7in
Item Weight
26.9 Oz
Number of Pages
384 Pages

Über dieses Produkt

Product Information

This volume offers a major reconceptualization of linguistic theory through the lens of morphology, crucially collapsing the distinction between the lexicon and the grammar. This approach accounts for both productive and non-productive morphological phenomena, and moreover integrates linguistic theory into psycholinguistics and human cognition.

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Oxford University Press, Incorporated
ISBN-10
0198827903
ISBN-13
9780198827900
eBay Product ID (ePID)
25038281228

Product Key Features

Author
Jenny Audring, Ray Jackendoff
Publication Name
Texture of the Lexicon : Relational Morphology and the Parallel Architecture
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Publication Year
2020
Type
Textbook
Number of Pages
384 Pages

Dimensions

Item Length
10in
Item Height
1in
Item Width
7in
Item Weight
26.9 Oz

Additional Product Features

Lc Classification Number
P241
Reviews
"Through extending Jackendoff's Parallel Architecture by a sophisticated system of co-indexing, the authors develop a surprising perspective on language as a whole. They overcome the separation of grammar and lexicon, the contrast of regular and idiosyncratic items, of productive and unproductive patterns, of core and periphery.Relational Morphology brings with it a new and exciting picture of language as an integrated mental capacity." -- Manfred Bierwisch, Humboldt University of Berlin "Jackendoff and Audring unravel the illusory divide between the lexicon and grammar to weave together, with enduring insights, a vast range of semi-regular and fully engaging phenomena." -- Adele Goldberg, Princeton University "Jackendoff and Audring combine the models of Parallel Architecture and Construction Morphology to propose an innovative perspective on the lexicon, morphology, phonology, syntax, semantics, and their interaction, centered around their simple, but far-reaching, Relational Hypothesis: all types of linguistic relatedness can be coded as static relational schemas over fully listed items, but a subset of those schemas also serve as productive, generative devices. The authors' wide-ranging exploration lays down the gauntlet for competing models." -- Andrew Spencer, University of Essex "This is a lovely book that elaborates the elegant and simple functional linguistic perspective of Jackendoff's (2002) "Parallel Architecture" research program into a detailed attempt to explain what lexical items are. The answer that Jackendoff and Audring arrive at is surprising: there is no principled distinction between grammar and lexicon, contrary to what has standardly been assumed. There is a wealth of fascinating predictions to test here." -- Ted Gibson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, "This is the best linguistics book of 2020: A comprehensive view of morphological patterns that does not struggle with, but comfortably explains, the frequently observed continuity between regular grammatical patterns and memorized/idiosyncratic forms." -- Martin Haspelmath "Through extending Jackendoff's Parallel Architecture by a sophisticated system of co-indexing, the authors develop a surprising perspective on language as a whole. They overcome the separation of grammar and lexicon, the contrast of regular and idiosyncratic items, of productive and unproductive patterns, of core and periphery. Relational Morphology brings with it a new and exciting picture of language as an integrated mental capacity." -- Manfred Bierwisch, Humboldt University of Berlin "Jackendoff and Audring unravel the illusory divide between the lexicon and grammar to weave together, with enduring insights, a vast range of semi-regular and fully engaging phenomena." -- Adele Goldberg, Princeton University "Jackendoff and Audring combine the models of Parallel Architecture and Construction Morphology to propose an innovative perspective on the lexicon, morphology, phonology, syntax, semantics, and their interaction, centered around their simple, but far-reaching, Relational Hypothesis: all types of linguistic relatedness can be coded as static relational schemas over fully listed items, but a subset of those schemas also serve as productive, generative devices. The authors' wide-ranging exploration lays down the gauntlet for competing models." -- Andrew Spencer, University of Essex "This is a lovely book that elaborates the elegant and simple functional linguistic perspective of Jackendoff's (2002) "Parallel Architecture" research program into a detailed attempt to explain what lexical items are. The answer that Jackendoff and Audring arrive at is surprising: there is no principled distinction between grammar and lexicon, contrary to what has standardly been assumed. There is a wealth of fascinating predictions to test here." -- Ted Gibson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, "The Texture of the Lexicon is a reader-friendly introduction to the framework of Relational Morphology that complements the Parallel Architecture approach. I believe that readers interested in morphology at large will find something interesting in this read." -- David M. Karaj, Linguist, "This is the best linguistics book of 2020: A comprehensive view of morphological patterns that does not struggle with, but comfortably explains, the frequently observed continuity between regular grammatical patterns and memorized/idiosyncratic forms." -- Martin Haspelmath "Through extending Jackendoff's Parallel Architecture by a sophisticated system of co-indexing, the authors develop a surprising perspective on language as a whole. They overcome the separation of grammar and lexicon, the contrast of regular and idiosyncratic items, of productive and unproductive patterns, of core and periphery.Relational Morphology brings with it a new and exciting picture of language as an integrated mental capacity." -- Manfred Bierwisch, Humboldt University of Berlin "Jackendoff and Audring unravel the illusory divide between the lexicon and grammar to weave together, with enduring insights, a vast range of semi-regular and fully engaging phenomena." -- Adele Goldberg, Princeton University "Jackendoff and Audring combine the models of Parallel Architecture and Construction Morphology to propose an innovative perspective on the lexicon, morphology, phonology, syntax, semantics, and their interaction, centered around their simple, but far-reaching, Relational Hypothesis: all types of linguistic relatedness can be coded as static relational schemas over fully listed items, but a subset of those schemas also serve as productive, generative devices. The authors' wide-ranging exploration lays down the gauntlet for competing models." -- Andrew Spencer, University of Essex "This is a lovely book that elaborates the elegant and simple functional linguistic perspective of Jackendoff's (2002) "Parallel Architecture" research program into a detailed attempt to explain what lexical items are. The answer that Jackendoff and Audring arrive at is surprising: there is no principled distinction between grammar and lexicon, contrary to what has standardly been assumed. There is a wealth of fascinating predictions to test here." -- Ted Gibson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Table of Content
Part I: The Theory1. Situating morphology2. The functions of schemas3. Motivation in the lexiconPart II: Using and refining the tools4. Formalizing morphological phenomena5. Formalizing inflection6. Morphologically conditioned phonological alternationsPart III: Beyond morphological theory7. Language processing and language acquisition through the lens of Relational Morphology8. Applying the tools to other domains9. Coda: What have we done?ReferencesIndex of words and schemasIndex of authors and subjects
Copyright Date
2019
Topic
Linguistics / Morphology, Linguistics / General
Lccn
2019-940874
Dewey Decimal
415.9
Intended Audience
Scholarly & Professional
Dewey Edition
23
Illustrated
Yes
Genre
Language Arts & Disciplines

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