Co-compounds and natural coordination:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York [u.a.]
Oxford Univ. Press
2005
|
Ausgabe: | 1. publ. |
Schriftenreihe: | Oxford studies in typology and linguistic theory
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Table of contents Inhaltsverzeichnis Klappentext |
Beschreibung: | Hier auch später erschienene, unveränderte Nachdrucke Includes bibliographical references and indexes |
Beschreibung: | XVIII, 334 S. Ill., Kt. |
ISBN: | 9780199276219 0199276218 9780199563326 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Co-compounds and natural coordination |c Bernhard Wälchli |
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300 | |a XVIII, 334 S. |b Ill., Kt. | ||
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490 | 0 | |a Oxford studies in typology and linguistic theory | |
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650 | 4 | |a Coordonnées (Linguistique) | |
650 | 4 | |a Marque (Linguistique) | |
650 | 4 | |a Mots composés | |
650 | 4 | |a Sémantique | |
650 | 4 | |a Grammatik | |
650 | 4 | |a Grammar, Comparative and general |x Coordinate constructions | |
650 | 4 | |a Grammar, Comparative and general |x Compound words | |
650 | 4 | |a Markedness (Linguistics) | |
650 | 4 | |a Semantics | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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---|---|
adam_text | Contents
Preface and Acknowledgements x
List ofFigures xii
List ofMaps xiii
List of Tables xiv
Conventions xv
1 Introduction 1
1.1 Basics of co compounds 1
1.1.1 The form of co compounds 2
1.1.2 The meaning of co compounds 5
1.1.3 The use of co compounds 8
1.1.4 Differences and similarities with phrase like tight
coordination 10
1.1.5 Are co compounds a form of parallelism? 15
1.2 Co compounds in the linguistic literature 17
1.3 Theoretical background, method, and material 22
1.3.1 Why this is not a classical typological study? 22
(i) Universal semantic domains and language specific
classes 23
(ii) Discrete and continuous typological variables 24
(iii) The problem of sampling for features that are
highly biased areally 25
(iv) Explanations in typology 25
(v) Summary 26
1.3.2 Meaning in language 26
(i) Meaning in natural languages is not systematically
taxonomic 27
(ii) Partial cover meanings 28
(iii) The form related ergo meaning related
approach and its limits 29
(iv) Semantic relativity and the level of cross linguistic
semantic comparison (morpheme vs. utterance) 30
(v) Contextual semantic sharpening 32
1.3.3 The linguistic material considered in this study 33
1.3.4 Summary 34
1.4 Organization of the following chapters 35
2 The Marking Patterns of Natural Coordination 38
2.1 Different kinds of markedness 38
2.2 Relational marking in natural coordination 45
2.3 Non relational marking in natural coordination 48
2.3.1 Distinctive non relational single marking 49
2.3.2 Distinctive non relational double marking 51
2.3.3 Distinctive non relational zero marking 54
2.3.4 Iconicity of the distinctive non relational marking
strategies 55
2.4 The syntax of single non relational marking in coordination 57
2.4.1 Group inflection 58
2.4.2 Is coordination with single non relational marking
syntactically asymmetric? 60
2.4.3 Phonological syntactic non isomorphism 60
2.5 Conclusions 64
3 Tight Coordination 67
3.1 The first dimension: the length of the coordination 67
3.2 The second dimension: the marking patterns of coordination 69
3.3 The third dimension: the semantic correlates of tight
coordination 74
3.3.1 Group vs. separate coordination 74
3.3.2 Intersective vs. non intersective coordination 76
3.3.3 Overlapping vs. non overlapping coordination 77
3.3.4 Contrast 78
3.3.5 Non exhaustive vs. exhaustive listing coordination 81
3.3.6 Disjunction 81
3.3.7 Explicative disjunction 83
3.3.8 Repair and pseudo repair 84
3.3.9 Enumeration 85
3.3.10 Pseudo coordination 85
3.3.11 Conclusions 86
3.4 Conclusions 87
4 Co compounds as a Lexical Class Type 90
4.1 The traditional morphological (and indirectly syntactic)
approach to compounding 90
4.2 Are (co )compounds really words? 92
4.2.1 What is word? Laying out the problem 92
4.2.2 Deconstructing the notion of word 93
4.2.3 Criteria for the wordhood of compounds
(with Special reference to co compounds) 97
(i) Semantic criteria for compounds 97
(ii) Conventionalized prosodic patterns 98
(iii) Compounding forms and clippings 99
(iv) Bound stems 100
(v) Word slots 101
(vi) Continuity 101
(vii) Fixed order 103
(viii) Conclusion 104
4.3 An alternative approach to co compounds: lexical classes 105
4.3.1 The middle as a typical example for a lexical class type 107
4.3.2 More examples of lexical class types 110
4.3.3 Co compounds as a lexical class type 113
4.3.4 Reconsidering lexicalization and the lexicon 114
4.3.5 Differences and similarities of lexical and
grammatical classes 117
4.4 The form of co compounds and the problem of formal
non distinctiveness 121
4.4.1 Distinguishing co compounds and sub compounds 122
4.4.2 Distinguishing co compounds and serial verbs 124
4.4.3 Distinguishing co compounds and coordination 126
4.5 Meronomic structure 130
4.6 Conclusions 131
5 A Semantic Classification of Co compounds 135
5.1 The basis of the semantic classification 136
5.2 The various semantic types of co compounds 137
5.2.1 Additive co compounds 137
5.2.2 Generalizing co compounds 139
5.2.3 Collective co compounds 141
5.2.4 Synonymic co compounds 143
5.2.5 Ornamental co compounds 146
5.2.6 Imitative co compounds 147
5.2.7 Figurative co compounds 149
5.2.8 Alternative and approximate co compounds 151
5.2.9 Scalar co compounds 152
5.2.10 Basic and non basic co compounds 154
5.3 Contextual semantic sharpening in co compounds 158
5.4 Compounds that are closely related to co compounds 161
5.4.1 Appositional compounds 161
5.4.2 Intermediate denoting compounds 162
5.4.3 Comparative (or figurative appositional) compounds 163
5.4.4 Ideophones and ideophone compounds 164
5.4.5 Reduplication 166
5.4.6 Echo words 167
5.4.7 Affirmative negative compounds 170
5.4.8 Conclusions 170
5.5 Contextual motivation of co compounds 171
5.5.1 Additive contextual co compounds 173
5.5.2 Emphasis 174
5.5.3 Generalizing context 175
5.5.4 Contrast (in adversative sequences) 175
5.5.5 Non referential contexts and restricted evidence 176
(i) Negation 176
(ii) Question 178
(iii) Irrealis, potentialis, conditional, and future 178
5.5.6 Distributivity 180
5.5.7 Pictorial contexts 181
5.5.8 Conclusions 182
5.6 Conclusions 183
6 The Areal Distribution of Co compounds in the Languages
of Eurasia 186
6.1 Patterns of areal coherence 186
6.2 Consideration of parallel texts 187
6.3 More evidence for a continuous diminishment of
co compounds from east to west throughout Eurasia 198
6.3.1 Turkic, Mongolian, and Tungus 198
6.3.2 The languages of the Caucasus 201
6.3.3 Indo European 203
6.3.4 Uralic 206
6.3.5 Dravidian 207
6.3.6 Sino Tibetan 208
6.3.7 Austroasiatic 210
6.3.8 Austronesian 211
6.3.9 Language isolates 212
6.3.10 Synthesis 214
6.4 Language internal diversity: the example of Mordvin 218
6.5 Diversity in co compounding in Eurasia 225
6.6 The independence of co compounds from other
typological features 229
6.6.1 Head and dependent marking 229
6.6.2 Isolating morphological type and monosyllabic words 230
6.6.3 Sub compounds 231
6.6.4 The type of ordinary coordination 231
6.6.5 Dyad constructions and family group classifiers 232
6.6.6 Loanwords 235
6.6.7 Conclusions 235
6.7 Conclusions 236
6.A Appendix: Beyond Eurasia 237
7 Some Considerations about the Diachronie Evolution of
Co compounds 243
7.1 The evolution of markers, patterns, and constructions
vs. the evolution of classes 243
7.2 The diachronic relationship between co compounds
and coordination 245
7.2.1 The condensation hypothesis 245
7.2.2 The introduetion of new heavy forms 250
7.2.3 Conclusions 251
7.3 Co compounds as a lexical class evolve gradually 252
7.4 The role of textual markedness for the aeeeptability of
co compounds 257
7.5 Co compounds in folk poetry and desemantization 264
7.6 Conclusions 270
8 Conclusions 274
Appendix A: Languages and their Linguistic Affiliation 281
Appendix B: Map of Languages 286
References 288
Index ofPersons 311
Index of Languages 317
Index ofSubjects 323
Co-Compounds and
Natural Coordination
Bernhard
Walchli
This book presents a typological survey and
analysis of the co-compound construction.
This understudied phenomenon is essentially
a compound whose meaning is the result of
coordinating the meanings of its components,
as when in some varieties of English father-mother
denotes parents . During the course of the book
Dr
Wälchli
examines and discusses topics of
great theoretical and linguistic interest. These
include the notion of word, markedness, the
syntax and semantics of coordination, grammat-
icalization, lexical semantics, the distinction
between compounding and phrase formation,
and the constructional meanings languages can
deploy. The book makes many observations and
points about typology and
areal
features and
includes a wealth of unfamiliar data. It will be
invaluable for typologists and of considerable
interest to a variety of specialists including
lexicologists, morphologists, construction
grammarians, cognitive linguists, semanticists,
field linguists, and syntacticians.
|
adam_txt |
Contents
Preface and Acknowledgements x
List ofFigures xii
List ofMaps xiii
List of Tables xiv
Conventions xv
1 Introduction 1
1.1 Basics of co compounds 1
1.1.1 The form of co compounds 2
1.1.2 The meaning of co compounds 5
1.1.3 The use of co compounds 8
1.1.4 Differences and similarities with phrase like tight
coordination 10
1.1.5 Are co compounds a form of parallelism? 15
1.2 Co compounds in the linguistic literature 17
1.3 Theoretical background, method, and material 22
1.3.1 Why this is not a classical typological study? 22
(i) Universal 'semantic' domains and 'language specific'
classes 23
(ii) Discrete and continuous typological variables 24
(iii) The problem of sampling for features that are
highly biased areally 25
(iv) Explanations in typology 25
(v) Summary 26
1.3.2 Meaning in language 26
(i) Meaning in natural languages is not systematically
taxonomic 27
(ii) Partial cover meanings 28
(iii) The form related ergo meaning related
approach and its limits 29
(iv) Semantic relativity and the level of cross linguistic
semantic comparison (morpheme vs. utterance) 30
(v) Contextual semantic sharpening 32
1.3.3 The linguistic material considered in this study 33
1.3.4 Summary 34
1.4 Organization of the following chapters 35
2 The Marking Patterns of Natural Coordination 38
2.1 Different kinds of markedness 38
2.2 Relational marking in natural coordination 45
2.3 Non relational marking in natural coordination 48
2.3.1 Distinctive non relational single marking 49
2.3.2 Distinctive non relational double marking 51
2.3.3 Distinctive non relational zero marking 54
2.3.4 Iconicity of the distinctive non relational marking
strategies 55
2.4 The syntax of single non relational marking in coordination 57
2.4.1 Group inflection 58
2.4.2 Is coordination with single non relational marking
syntactically asymmetric? 60
2.4.3 Phonological syntactic non isomorphism 60
2.5 Conclusions 64
3 Tight Coordination 67
3.1 The first dimension: the length of the coordination 67
3.2 The second dimension: the marking patterns of coordination 69
3.3 The third dimension: the semantic correlates of tight
coordination 74
3.3.1 Group vs. separate coordination 74
3.3.2 Intersective vs. non intersective coordination 76
3.3.3 Overlapping vs. non overlapping coordination 77
3.3.4 Contrast 78
3.3.5 Non exhaustive vs. exhaustive listing coordination 81
3.3.6 Disjunction 81
3.3.7 Explicative disjunction 83
3.3.8 Repair and pseudo repair 84
3.3.9 Enumeration 85
3.3.10 Pseudo coordination 85
3.3.11 Conclusions 86
3.4 Conclusions 87
4 Co compounds as a Lexical Class Type 90
4.1 The traditional morphological (and indirectly syntactic)
approach to compounding 90
4.2 Are (co )compounds really words? 92
4.2.1 What is word? Laying out the problem 92
4.2.2 Deconstructing the notion of word 93
4.2.3 Criteria for the 'wordhood' of compounds
(with Special reference to co compounds) 97
(i) Semantic criteria for compounds 97
(ii) Conventionalized prosodic patterns 98
(iii) Compounding forms and clippings 99
(iv) Bound stems 100
(v) Word slots 101
(vi) Continuity 101
(vii) Fixed order 103
(viii) Conclusion 104
4.3 An alternative approach to co compounds: lexical classes 105
4.3.1 The middle as a typical example for a lexical class type 107
4.3.2 More examples of lexical class types 110
4.3.3 Co compounds as a lexical class type 113
4.3.4 Reconsidering lexicalization and the lexicon 114
4.3.5 Differences and similarities of lexical and
grammatical classes 117
4.4 The form of co compounds and the problem of formal
non distinctiveness 121
4.4.1 Distinguishing co compounds and sub compounds 122
4.4.2 Distinguishing co compounds and serial verbs 124
4.4.3 Distinguishing co compounds and coordination 126
4.5 Meronomic structure 130
4.6 Conclusions 131
5 A Semantic Classification of Co compounds 135
5.1 The basis of the semantic classification 136
5.2 The various semantic types of co compounds 137
5.2.1 Additive co compounds 137
5.2.2 Generalizing co compounds 139
5.2.3 Collective co compounds 141
5.2.4 Synonymic co compounds 143
5.2.5 Ornamental co compounds 146
5.2.6 Imitative co compounds 147
5.2.7 Figurative co compounds 149
5.2.8 Alternative and approximate co compounds 151
5.2.9 Scalar co compounds 152
5.2.10 Basic and non basic co compounds 154
5.3 Contextual semantic sharpening in co compounds 158
5.4 Compounds that are closely related to co compounds 161
5.4.1 Appositional compounds 161
5.4.2 Intermediate denoting compounds 162
5.4.3 Comparative (or figurative appositional) compounds 163
5.4.4 Ideophones and ideophone compounds 164
5.4.5 Reduplication 166
5.4.6 Echo words 167
5.4.7 Affirmative negative compounds 170
5.4.8 Conclusions 170
5.5 Contextual motivation of co compounds 171
5.5.1 Additive contextual co compounds 173
5.5.2 Emphasis 174
5.5.3 Generalizing context 175
5.5.4 Contrast (in adversative sequences) 175
5.5.5 Non referential contexts and restricted evidence 176
(i) Negation 176
(ii) Question 178
(iii) Irrealis, potentialis, conditional, and future 178
5.5.6 Distributivity 180
5.5.7 Pictorial contexts 181
5.5.8 Conclusions 182
5.6 Conclusions 183
6 The Areal Distribution of Co compounds in the Languages
of Eurasia 186
6.1 Patterns of areal coherence 186
6.2 Consideration of parallel texts 187
6.3 More evidence for a continuous diminishment of
co compounds from east to west throughout Eurasia 198
6.3.1 Turkic, Mongolian, and Tungus 198
6.3.2 The languages of the Caucasus 201
6.3.3 Indo European 203
6.3.4 Uralic 206
6.3.5 Dravidian 207
6.3.6 Sino Tibetan 208
6.3.7 Austroasiatic 210
6.3.8 Austronesian 211
6.3.9 Language isolates 212
6.3.10 Synthesis 214
6.4 Language internal diversity: the example of Mordvin 218
6.5 Diversity in co compounding in Eurasia 225
6.6 The independence of co compounds from other
typological features 229
6.6.1 Head and dependent marking 229
6.6.2 Isolating morphological type and monosyllabic words 230
6.6.3 Sub compounds 231
6.6.4 The type of ordinary coordination 231
6.6.5 Dyad constructions and family group classifiers 232
6.6.6 Loanwords 235
6.6.7 Conclusions 235
6.7 Conclusions 236
6.A Appendix: Beyond Eurasia 237
7 Some Considerations about the Diachronie Evolution of
Co compounds 243
7.1 The evolution of markers, patterns, and constructions
vs. the evolution of classes 243
7.2 The diachronic relationship between co compounds
and coordination 245
7.2.1 The condensation hypothesis 245
7.2.2 The introduetion of new 'heavy forms' 250
7.2.3 Conclusions 251
7.3 Co compounds as a lexical class evolve gradually 252
7.4 The role of textual markedness for the aeeeptability of
co compounds 257
7.5 Co compounds in folk poetry and desemantization 264
7.6 Conclusions 270
8 Conclusions 274
Appendix A: Languages and their Linguistic Affiliation 281
Appendix B: Map of Languages 286
References 288
Index ofPersons 311
Index of Languages 317
Index ofSubjects 323
Co-Compounds and
Natural Coordination
Bernhard
Walchli
This book presents a typological survey and
analysis of the co-compound construction.
This understudied phenomenon is essentially
a compound whose meaning is the result of
coordinating the meanings of its components,
as when in some varieties of English father-mother
denotes 'parents'. During the course of the book
Dr
Wälchli
examines and discusses topics of
great theoretical and linguistic interest. These
include the notion of word, markedness, the
syntax and semantics of coordination, grammat-
icalization, lexical semantics, the distinction
between compounding and phrase formation,
and the constructional meanings languages can
deploy. The book makes many observations and
points about typology and
areal
features and
includes a wealth of unfamiliar data. It will be
invaluable for typologists and of considerable
interest to a variety of specialists including
lexicologists, morphologists, construction
grammarians, cognitive linguists, semanticists,
field linguists, and syntacticians. |
any_adam_object | 1 |
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author | Wälchli, Bernhard 1972- |
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discipline_str_mv | Sprachwissenschaft Literaturwissenschaft |
edition | 1. publ. |
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id | DE-604.BV020841237 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T13:16:36Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T20:26:22Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780199276219 0199276218 9780199563326 |
language | English |
lccn | 2004030581 |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-014163116 |
oclc_num | 57349132 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-12 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-83 DE-20 DE-473 DE-BY-UBG |
owner_facet | DE-12 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-83 DE-20 DE-473 DE-BY-UBG |
physical | XVIII, 334 S. Ill., Kt. |
publishDate | 2005 |
publishDateSearch | 2005 |
publishDateSort | 2005 |
publisher | Oxford Univ. Press |
record_format | marc |
series2 | Oxford studies in typology and linguistic theory |
spelling | Wälchli, Bernhard 1972- Verfasser (DE-588)1055121617 aut Co-compounds and natural coordination Bernhard Wälchli 1. publ. New York [u.a.] Oxford Univ. Press 2005 XVIII, 334 S. Ill., Kt. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Oxford studies in typology and linguistic theory Hier auch später erschienene, unveränderte Nachdrucke Includes bibliographical references and indexes Coordonnées (Linguistique) Marque (Linguistique) Mots composés Sémantique Grammatik Grammar, Comparative and general Coordinate constructions Grammar, Comparative and general Compound words Markedness (Linguistics) Semantics Wortbildung (DE-588)4066957-9 gnd rswk-swf Koordination Linguistik (DE-588)4206611-6 gnd rswk-swf Semantik (DE-588)4054490-4 gnd rswk-swf Kopulativkompositum (DE-588)4257114-5 gnd rswk-swf Kopulativkompositum (DE-588)4257114-5 s Koordination Linguistik (DE-588)4206611-6 s Wortbildung (DE-588)4066957-9 s Semantik (DE-588)4054490-4 s DE-604 http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip055/2004030581.html Table of contents HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=014163116&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung UB Regensburg application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=014163116&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Klappentext |
spellingShingle | Wälchli, Bernhard 1972- Co-compounds and natural coordination Coordonnées (Linguistique) Marque (Linguistique) Mots composés Sémantique Grammatik Grammar, Comparative and general Coordinate constructions Grammar, Comparative and general Compound words Markedness (Linguistics) Semantics Wortbildung (DE-588)4066957-9 gnd Koordination Linguistik (DE-588)4206611-6 gnd Semantik (DE-588)4054490-4 gnd Kopulativkompositum (DE-588)4257114-5 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4066957-9 (DE-588)4206611-6 (DE-588)4054490-4 (DE-588)4257114-5 |
title | Co-compounds and natural coordination |
title_auth | Co-compounds and natural coordination |
title_exact_search | Co-compounds and natural coordination |
title_exact_search_txtP | Co-compounds and natural coordination |
title_full | Co-compounds and natural coordination Bernhard Wälchli |
title_fullStr | Co-compounds and natural coordination Bernhard Wälchli |
title_full_unstemmed | Co-compounds and natural coordination Bernhard Wälchli |
title_short | Co-compounds and natural coordination |
title_sort | co compounds and natural coordination |
topic | Coordonnées (Linguistique) Marque (Linguistique) Mots composés Sémantique Grammatik Grammar, Comparative and general Coordinate constructions Grammar, Comparative and general Compound words Markedness (Linguistics) Semantics Wortbildung (DE-588)4066957-9 gnd Koordination Linguistik (DE-588)4206611-6 gnd Semantik (DE-588)4054490-4 gnd Kopulativkompositum (DE-588)4257114-5 gnd |
topic_facet | Coordonnées (Linguistique) Marque (Linguistique) Mots composés Sémantique Grammatik Grammar, Comparative and general Coordinate constructions Grammar, Comparative and general Compound words Markedness (Linguistics) Semantics Wortbildung Koordination Linguistik Semantik Kopulativkompositum |
url | http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip055/2004030581.html http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=014163116&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=014163116&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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