The aim of SALSA is to create a large lexical semantics resource for German ... 3 See [8] and the SALSA project homepage http : //www . coli . uni-sb . de/le x ...
The aim of this paper is to analyse the syntax-semantics interface of the Old English speech verbs secgan and tellan, and the Present-day. English speech verbs ...
MARTA M.ª GONZÃLEZ ORTA. Universidad de ... The aim of this paper is to analyse the syntax-semantics interface of ...... Principios de Semántica Estructural.
et al. 1999). In this squib, we want to discuss concrete reductions of discrete infinity of the natural number. Specifically, we want to investigate the extent to which ...
domain of idioms, including work on incorporation and a recent implementation of a semantics for the ..... I just buy them).' (quantificational) ... [T]he VP is the domain of a context-free interpretive mechanism specifying an event- type, which is .
Syntax and Semantics. COS 301. Programming Languages. Chapter 3 Topics. •
Introduction. • The General Problem of Describing Syntax. • Formal Methods of ...
Oct 22, 2016 - Listing 2: Rejected code â music artist is not a subtype of ..... Listing 8 shows the code for this function. ...... SWOBE - embedding the se-.
Dowty, David. 1979. Word meaning and Montague grammar. Dordrecht: Reidel. Egg, Markus, Koller, Alexander and Niehren, Joachim. 2001. The constraint lan-.
In this paper several aspects of the syntax and semantics of Spanish root exclamatives are ana- lyzed. Assuming a ..... 'These apples are really good/tasty!' b.
semantics interface, like the syntax-pragmatics interface (see Valenzuela 2006), is a locus for .... Roberti regrets PROi/*j have-INF arrived late and Maria too.
o directional/aspectual verb particles (John ate the apple up) o complex adjectival ...... Preclassic and Classic French
However, since the type assignment is such that John cannot be combined with loves, the .... Otherwise, the sentence Love John could either mean Love John.
spread over two nominal constituents: (1.1). B cher books sieht sees. Anna .... however that in this sentence, B cher needs to be pronounced with the prosodic.
feature HEAD and the features of a same level, to the ... also plays the role of the head-daughter- .... Pollard Carl, Sag Ivan, 1994, Head-Driven Phrase.
finiteness (finite, infinitive, participle) and the mood proper when the verb is finite. Fig. 3 gives a graphical representation of, and present. The mood indicative, as ...
coniuratione; Ver. Aeneid, selections from book 6; Prop. Elegies, book 1; Ov. Metamorphoses, book 1; Petr. Satyricon 26-78 (Cena Trimalchionis); Vulgata: ...
speakers, Sjef Barbiers, Rajesh Bhatt, Regine Eckardt, Jack Hoeksema, Ed. Keenan ..... introduction to the WHM construction in Japanese. Section 3 ..... tial ingredient in Geurts's (2005) account of free choice permission, in Geurts and Nouwen's .... Bedeutung 10. http://people.umass.edu/yhara/download/darou_hara.pdf.
Concord and the Syntax Semantics Interface In natural languages a functional operation can be manifested more than once in the morphosyntax of one sentence. Most notable are the phenomena of negative concord (where several negative elements contribute to one negation) and sequence of tense phenomena, where the same happens in the temporal domain. Similar observations can be made regarding the domain of mood, case-agreement, multiple Wh, and conditional sentences. On a general and intuitive level, the similarities are striking. These phenomena have each been studied in various domains, from both an empirical and a theoretical point of view. For this workshop we have solicited contributions which approach the phenomena from a general, cross-categorial perspective: across the various domains, theoretical, and typological as well. What should be the logical form of those constructions? To what extent (at what cost) does it allow for a compositional treatment? How similar and how general are the phenomena really? What do these phenomena tell us about the model of grammar? The general aim of this workshop is to bring together researchers of different disciplines (semantics, syntax, typology) in order to create new insights about concord phenomena and the syntax-semantics interface. The workshop provides a forum for advanced PhD students and researchers to present and discuss their work with colleagues and researchers who work in the broad subject areas represented at ESSLLI. This volume contains abstracts of the talks given by the invited speakers Pieter Muysken (Radboud University, Nijmegen) and Arnim von Stechow (Seminar f¨ ur Sprachwissenschaft, T¨ ubingen), the six papers which have been accepted for presentation, and the two alternates. All submissions (16 in total) have been reviewed by a program committee consisting of the invited speakers, Sjef Barbiers, Rajesh Bhatt, Regine Eckardt, Jack Hoeksema, Ed Keenan, Ad Neeleman, Henri¨ette de Swart, Raffaella Zanuttini, Alessandro Zucchi, Jan Wouter Zwart. We want to thank them wholeheartedly for the substantial comments they have given. Paul J.E. Dekker and Hedde H. Zeijlstra Amsterdam/T¨ ubingen, June 2006
1
1
Table of Contents Introduction • Concord and the Syntax Semantics Interface Paul J.E. Dekker and Hedde H. Zeijlstra . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Concord and functional categories: A South American perspective Pieter Muysken, Radboud University Nijmegen A
I start out with the question whether functional categories have special semantic and syntactic status, and, time permitting briefly survey the features these categories are claimed to have in the literature:
Semantic features
Special abstract meaning. No modification No Theta-assignment No relation to ontology No sense relations No meaning coercion Flexibility Semantic projection Deletability and expression as a null form No selectional restrictions Provide a landing site for movement Syntactic features Heads Part of projection chains May be interpretable at interfaces or not Obligatorily transitive Take a single type of complement Do not head argument Inseparable from their complement Categorial specificity B
I investigate the phenomenon of concord as lying at the syntax/semantics interface and try to establish whether the set of elements undergoing concord is coexentisve with the set of functional categories (see also this conference), and conclude that it affects the middle layers, not so much the inner (lexiconcentred) or outer (utterance-centred) layers, at least in the verbal/clausal domain. Any concord outside the functional domain?
Gender Number Person Case Negation Tense Mood Modality Wh
la casa blanca les soldats marchent she eats de Bello Gallico Je ne regrette rien He said the car was rusting because of the humidity. Greek non-verdical contexts for subjunctive This substance may possibly be hazardous to your health. [CP Wasi glaubte Miró [CP welches Bildi Picasso ti gemalt hatte]?
3
Definiteness Control/free will Location Aspect Transitivity
het bruine paard / een bruin paard Georgian in der Garden / in den Garten ??? Event argument homomorphism Quechua clitic climbing