Card | Table | RUSMARC | |
Category change from a constructional perspective / edited by Kristel Van Goethem, Muriel Norde, Evie Coussé. — 1 online resource. — (Constructional approaches to language). — <URL:http://elib.fa.ru/ebsco/1724726.pdf>.Record create date: 12/12/2017 Subject: Construction grammar.; Grammar, Comparative and general — Grammaticalization.; Categorial grammar.; Reconstruction (Linguistics); Linguistic change.; Categorial grammar.; Construction grammar.; Grammar, Comparative and general — Grammaticalization.; Linguistic change.; Reconstruction (Linguistics); LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Grammar & Punctuation; LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / Syntax Collections: EBSCO Allowed Actions: –
Action 'Read' will be available if you login or access site from another network
Action 'Download' will be available if you login or access site from another network
Group: Anonymous Network: Internet |
Document access rights
Network | User group | Action | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Finuniversity Local Network | All | |||||
Internet | Readers | |||||
Internet | Anonymous |
Table of Contents
- Category Change from a Constructional Perspective
- Editorial page
- Title page
- LCC data
- Table of contents
- Acknowledgements
- Part I. Introduction
- Chapter 1. Category change from a constructional perspective: Introduction
- 1. Linguistic categories: Discrete or gradient?
- 2. Category change
- 3. This volume
- References
- Part II. Category genesis: The creation of new categories
- Chapter 2. Category genesis in Chitimacha: A constructional approach
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Background
- 3. Preverbs in Chitimacha
- 3.1 ʔap venitive
- 3.2 ʔapš reditive
- 3.3 hi andative
- 3.4 his adreditive
- 3.5 kap super-lative
- 3.6 kaːpʼs superreditive
- 3.7 ka translative
- 3.8 kas transreditive
- 3.9 ni detransitivizer
- 4. The constructionalization of Chitimacha preverbs
- 5. Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Appendix. Abbreviations
- Chapter 3. Derivation without category change: A network-based analysis of diminutive prefixoids in Dutch
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Theoretical preliminaries
- 2.1 Construction Morphology
- 2.2 Constructional networks
- 2.3 Inheritance links and lateral links
- 3. The present study
- 3.1 Sources and method
- 3.2 Results
- 3.3 Formal and semantic properties
- 4. A network analysis
- 4.1 Inheritance links and lateral links in the dpc network
- 4.2 A multiple source construction?
- 5. Concluding remarks
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Appendix. Google and COW frequencies
- Part III. Category change in syntactic constructions
- Chapter 4. Grammaticalization, host-class expansion and category change
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Theoretical framework
- 2.1 Construction grammar
- 2.2 Prototype theory
- 3. Host-class expansion in the have and be perfect in Dutch
- 4. Host-class expansion in two binominal quantifier constructions in Spanish
- 4. Host-class expansion in two binominal quantifier constructions in Spanish
- 5. Summary and discussion
- 6. Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 5. Why would anyone take long?: Word classes and Construction Grammar in the history of long
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1 Data sources
- 1.2 Prototypical adjective and adverb
- 2. The boundaries of adverb long
- 2.1 Between adverb and adjective?
- 2.2 Between adverb and adposition?
- 2.3 Between adverb and noun?
- 3. Excursus on Danish
- 4. Theoretical prerequisites
- 4.1 Vagueness
- 4.2 Decategorialisation
- 4.3 Word classes and Construction Grammar
- 5. A partial constructional history of temporal long
- 6. Closing remarks
- Acknowledgements
- Data sources and abbreviations
- Secondary works
- 1. Introduction
- Chapter 6. Category change in the English gerund: Tangled web or fine-tuned constructional network?
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Goals and methodology
- 3. Gerunds: Nominal and clausal deixis
- 3.1 Qualitative analysis: Types of deixis
- 3.2 Quantitative analysis: The rise of clausal deixis in bare nominal and verbal gerunds
- 4. Reflections on category change: Is the verbalization of the gerund a case of constructionalization?
- 4. Reflections on category change: Is the verbalization of the gerund a case of constructionalization?
- 5. Concluding remarks
- References
- Chapter 7. The emergence of a new adverbial downtoner: Constructional change and constructionalization of Dutch [ver van X] and [verre van X] ‘far from X’
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Downtoners
- 3. [ver van X] and [verre van X] in present-day Dutch
- 3.1 Method
- 3.2 Semantics
- 3.3 Complementation patterns
- 4. Diachronic developments
- 4.1 Method
- 4.2 [ver van X]
- 4.3 [verre van X]
- 4.4 Comparison [ver van X] and [verre van X]
- 5. Category change, constructional change and constructionalization
- 6. Conclusions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Online sources
- Part IV. Category change in morphological constructions
- Chapter 8. Category change in construction morphology
- 1. Introduction: Override constructions
- 2. Coercion by morphological constructions
- 2.1 Coercion in word formation: change of semantic class
- 2.2 Category change through inflection
- 3. Construction-dependent morphology and category change
- 3.1 The op het A-e af construction
- 3.2 The aan de [V]N construction
- 3.3 The [voor de N]PP-construction
- 3.4 Category change in verbal constructions
- 4. Conclusions
- References
- Chapter 9. Evaluative morphology’ in German, Dutch and Swedish: Constructional Networks and the Loci of Change
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Theoretical preliminaries
- 2.1 Sources of adjectival evaluatives
- 2.2 Evaluative prefixoids
- 2.3 Affixoids in construction morphology
- 2.4 Abstract subschemata for evaluative compounds
- 3. Evaluatives in German, Dutch and Swedish
- 3.1 Denominal evaluatives and nouns
- 3.2 Intensification of adjectives and adverbs
- 3.3 Evaluative ‘loan prefixes’
- 4. Constructional networks
- 4.1 Paradigmatic relationships
- 4.2 Source constructions and formal variation
- 5. Conclusions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Chapter 10. Constructional change on the contentful-procedural gradient: The case of the -idz(o) construction in Griko
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The suffix ‑idz(o): Synchronic variation and diachronic change
- 2.1 Verbalisers in Standard Modern Greek and Griko
- 2.2 The ‑idz(o) verbs
- 2.3 Criteria for grammaticality of ‑idz(o)
- 2.4 Paradigmatic interference and ‑idz(o)
- 3. Grammaticalisation within morphology: From derivation to inflection
- 3.1 Defining grammaticalisation
- 3.2 From derivational morphemes to inflectional class markers
- 4. A “hybrid construction” between derivation and inflection
- 4.1 Grammaticalisation as constructionalisation
- 4.2 [X-idz(o)] as a hybrid construction
- 5. Conclusions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Primary sources
- Part V. Discussion
- Chapter 11. Change in category membership from the perspective of construction grammar: A commentary
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Categories: Creation and change
- 2.1 The creation of a new category
- 2.2 Category restructuring
- 3. Gradualness
- 4. The constructional network
- 4.1 Links between constructions
- 4.2 Constructionalization, constructional changes and categories
- 5. Concluding comments
- References
- Construction index
- Subject index
Usage statistics
Access count: 0
Last 30 days: 0 Detailed usage statistics |