Noun-modifying clause constructions in languages of Eurasia :: rethinking theoretical and geographical boundaries /
Gespeichert in:
Weitere Verfasser: | , , |
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Amsterdam ; Philadelphia :
John Benjamins Publishing Company,
[2017]
|
Schriftenreihe: | Typological studies in language ;
v. 116. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Volltext |
Beschreibung: | 1 online resource |
Bibliographie: | Includes bibliographical references and index. |
ISBN: | 9789027266132 9027266131 |
ISSN: | 0167-7373 ; |
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245 | 0 | 0 | |a Noun-modifying clause constructions in languages of Eurasia : |b rethinking theoretical and geographical boundaries / |c edited by Yoshiko Matsumoto, Bernard Comrie, Peter Sells. |
264 | 1 | |a Amsterdam ; |a Philadelphia : |b John Benjamins Publishing Company, |c [2017] | |
300 | |a 1 online resource | ||
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490 | 1 | |a Typological studies in language, |x 0167-7373 ; |v volume 116 | |
504 | |a Includes bibliographical references and index. | ||
588 | 0 | |a Print version record and CIP data provided by publisher. | |
505 | 0 | |a Intro -- Noun-Modifying Clause Constructions in Languages of Eurasia -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- Preface -- Noun-modifying clause constructions in languages of Eurasia -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The construction under investigation -- 2.1 Types of NMCC -- 2.2 Generalized relative clauses and "aboutness relatives" -- 3. Possible common properties of the languages in the investigation -- 4. Questions investigated -- 5. Chapters in the book -- 6. Key terminology -- References -- General noun-modifying clause constructions in Japanese -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Properties of the General Noun Modifying Clause Construction (GNMCC) in Japanese -- 3. Possible relations of the head noun to the modifying clause -- 3.1 Clause-host type GNMCCs (Argument, adjunct and frame NMCCs) -- 3.2 Noun-host type GNMCCs (Content noun NMCCs) -- 3.3 Clause and noun-host type GNMCCs (Relational/perceptional noun NMCCs) -- 4. Determining factors for acceptable constructions -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- The attributive versus final distinction and the manifestation of "main clause phenomena" in Japanese and Korean noun modifying clause constructions -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Noun-modifying clause constructions and attributive predicate forms -- 3. 'Main clause phenomena' in Japanese and Korean NMCCs -- 4. Further infiltration of main clause phenomena into Japanese NMCCs: Emergence of the 'less overt' clause linkage devices marking direct quotation -- 5. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Noun-modifying constructions in Korean -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Forms and functions of NMCCs -- 2.1 Overview of morphology -- 2.2 Relative clauses: Basic patterns -- 2.3 Noun complement clauses -- 2.4 Other complement-like clauses -- 2.4.1 Perception noun complements -- 2.4.2 Arguments of relational nouns. | |
505 | 8 | |a 2.5 Obliquely related modifying clauses -- 2.6 Modifying clauses with multiple nominative sources -- 3. Limits of NMCCs -- 3.1 Extended relativization examples -- 3.2 Consequential calculation -- 3.3 Limits on apparent relative clauses -- 4. Island effects in relative clauses -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- Noun-modifying clause constructions in Sino-Tibetan languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Sino-Tibetan -- 3. Modern Mandarin -- 4. Discussion -- References -- Noun-modifying clauses in Cantonese -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Typological properties of Cantonese -- 3. Forms and functions of noun-modifying clauses -- 3.1 Noun modification in Mandarin and Cantonese -- 3.2 Typology of NMCCs -- 3.2.1 Argument NMCCs -- 3.2.2 Adjunct NMCCs -- 3.3 Extended NMCCs -- 3.3.1 Frame NMCCs -- 3.3.2 Content noun NMCCs -- 3.4 Pragmatics and ambiguous NMCCs -- 4. Conclusions -- Acknowledgements -- References -- General noun-modifying clause constructions in Hinuq and Bezhta, with a note on other Daghestanian languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. GNMCCs with a coreferential element in the modifying clause and "accessibility" -- 2.1 The "gap" strategy -- 2.1.1 The understood coreferential noun phrase in the modifying clause is an argument -- 2.1.2 "Relativization" of adjuncts -- 2.2 Resumptive pronouns -- 3. GNMCCs without a coreferential noun phrase in the modifying clause -- 3.1 Other components of the Frame -- Consequence/result -- Reverse condition -- Purpose -- Requisite -- 3.2 Sentential complements of nouns -- Nouns of communication -- Nouns of thought and feeling -- Other content-taking nouns as heads -- Other types -- 4. Coreference across clause boundaries -- 5. Other Nakh-Daghestanian languages -- 6. Conclusions and interpretations -- 7. A note on Tsez -- Acknowledgements -- References. | |
505 | 8 | |a The general noun-modifying clause construction in Tundra Nenets and its possible origin -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The basic properties of the language -- 3. Relative clauses -- 4. Noun complementation -- 5. General noun-modifying clause constructions -- 5.1 Relativization-like function -- 5.2 Extended functions -- 6. GNMCCs and noun-noun compounds -- 7. Remarks about diachrony -- References -- Noun-modifying constructions and relativization in the central and western Caucasus -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Survey of relativization strategies and GNMCC's -- 2.1 Nakh-Daghestanian -- 2.2 Ossetic (Digor dialect) -- 2.3 West Caucasian -- 2.4 Kartvelian -- 3. Survey of other relevant typological variables -- 3.1 Constraints on relativization: Role and/or case of RN -- 3.2 Preferred case or role, based on text frequency counts -- 3.3 Core chaining -- 3.4 Relationship of relativization to core chaining -- 3.5 Agreement and how it works -- 3.6 Survey: Summary -- 4. Conclusions -- References -- Noun-modifying clause constructions in Ainu -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Basic properties of Ainu -- 2.1 Basic clause types in Ainu -- 2.2 Noun phrase structure -- 3. Noun-modifying clause constructions in Ainu: Relative clauses vs. noun-complement clauses -- 4. Relative clauses -- 4.1 Relativization of arguments -- 4.1.1 Subject of intransitive verb (S) -- 4.1.2 Subject of two-place transitive verb (A) -- 4.1.3 Subject of three-place transitive verb (A) -- 4.1.4 Object of two-place transitive (O) -- 4.1.5 Object of three-place transitive (O) -- 4.2 Relativization of non-arguments -- 4.2.1 Relativization of adjuncts -- 4.2.2 Relativization of possessor -- 4.2.3 Relativization of locative and allative adjuncts -- 5. Noun-complement clauses -- 5.1 Content-taking nouns as head -- 5.2 Perception nouns as head -- 5.3 Relational nouns as head. | |
505 | 8 | |a 6. Grammaticalization of noun-modifying clause constructions -- 6.1 Relative clause construction with bound nouns as head> lexical nominalizations -- 6.2 Noun-complement clause construction with perception nouns as head> 'mermaid construction' -- 6.3 Noun-complement clause construction with relational nouns as head> subordinate temporal clause construction -- 7. Noun + noun compounds -- 8. Emergent GNMCC -- 9. Island violation -- 10. Concluding remarks -- Acknowledgements -- Sources -- References -- Turkish and Turkic complex noun phrase constructions -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Turkish and Sakha constructions headed by a noun or noun phrase: Brief description of their basic properties -- 2.1 Turkish -- 2.1.1 Turkish N-complement clause constructions as phrasal compounds -- 2.1.2 Turkish relative clause constructions as nominal phrases with "adjectival" modifiers -- 2.1.3 Relative clauses have gaps, N-complement clause constructions do not -- 2.1.4 Additional morpho-syntactic properties of relative clauses which are different from those of noun-complement constructions in Turkish -- 2.2 Sakha: More Japanese-like, but not completely -- 3. Brief comparison of island violations, gapless RCs, and CNPs with loose head-to-clause connections -- 3.1 Sakha -- 3.1.1 Island violations in Sakha -- 3.1.2 Gapless RCs in Sakha -- 3.1.3 CNPs with loose head-to-clause connection in Sakha -- 3.2 Turkish -- 3.2.1 Island violations in Turkish -- 3.2.2 Gapless RCs in Turkish -- 3.2.3 CNPs with loose head-to-clause connections in Turkish -- 4. Returning to questions about syntactic islands -- 4.1 Apparent island violations -- 4.2 Apparently gapless relative clauses are gapped relative clauses targeting obliques -- 5. Resumptive pronouns: To what extent are they optional or obligatory, and in what contexts? -- 5.1 Resumptive pronouns in Sakha. | |
505 | 8 | |a 5.2 Resumptive pronouns in Turkish -- 6. Islands in Sakha and Turkish: More on resumption, and effects of the islands' placement in the matrix -- 6.1 Sakha -- 6.1.1 A well-formed instance of resumption as a saving device -- 6.1.2 Ill-formed instances of resumption in Sakha island violations -- 6.2 Turkish -- 6.3 Comparisons -- 7. Summary and conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Noun-modifying constructions in Marathi -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Noun-modifying constructions (NMCs) in Marathi -- 2.1 Relativizing NMCs -- (A) "Gap" type relativizing NMCs -- (B) Non-reduction strategy: The relative-corelative type of relativizing NMC -- (C) So-called "fused" relatives -- 2.2 Beyond accessibility -- 2.2.1 Reduced valency prenominal relatives -- 2.2.2 Verb-gapped prenominal relatives -- 2.2.3 Gapping NMCs with unpredictable (non-compositional) semantics -- 2.2.4 Gapless NMCs with sensory and circumstantial head nouns -- 2.3 Noun-complement NMCs -- 2.4 The short prenominal NMC -- 2.5 The short relative-corelative construction -- 3. Other functions of NMCs in '-lel'- and '-ṇār' -- 3.1 As a complementizer -- 3.2 As insubordinate "finite" verbs (Evans 2007) -- 4. Marathi NMCs: Historical remarks -- 5. Suggestions for further investigation and concluding remarks -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Conclusion -- 1. The geographic extent of GNMCCs in Eurasia -- 2. Competition with other constructions -- 3. Factors that promote or hinder the presence of GNMCCs -- References -- Examples to explore in noun-modifying constructions -- A. Basic structures -- background -- questions/ examples -- B. Detailed elicitation of NMCs -- B1. Relative clause equivalents -- B2. Sentential complement of noun -- Nouns of communication as head -- Nouns of thoughts and feeling as head -- Other content-taking nouns as head -- B3. Other types of NMC -- Relational nouns as head. | |
650 | 0 | |a Grammar, Comparative and general |x Relative clauses. |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056327 | |
650 | 0 | |a Grammar, Comparative and general |x Noun phrase. |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056310 | |
650 | 0 | |a Grammar, Comparative and general |x Syntax. |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056338 | |
650 | 0 | |a Languages in contact |z Eurasia. | |
651 | 0 | |a Eurasia |x Languages. | |
650 | 0 | |a Typology (Linguistics) |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85139174 | |
650 | 6 | |a Relatives. | |
650 | 6 | |a Syntaxe. | |
650 | 6 | |a Langues en contact |z Eurasie. | |
650 | 6 | |a Typologie (Linguistique) | |
650 | 7 | |a LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES |x Grammar & Punctuation. |2 bisacsh | |
650 | 7 | |a LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES |x Linguistics |x Syntax. |2 bisacsh | |
650 | 7 | |a Grammar, Comparative and general |x Noun phrase |2 fast | |
650 | 7 | |a Grammar, Comparative and general |x Relative clauses |2 fast | |
650 | 7 | |a Grammar, Comparative and general |x Syntax |2 fast | |
650 | 7 | |a Language and languages |2 fast | |
650 | 7 | |a Languages in contact |2 fast | |
650 | 7 | |a Typology (Linguistics) |2 fast | |
651 | 7 | |a Eurasia |2 fast | |
655 | 4 | |a Electronic book. | |
700 | 1 | |a Matsumoto, Yoshiko, |d 1954- |e editor. |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/nr97004673 | |
700 | 1 | |a Comrie, Bernard, |d 1947- |e editor. |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n79117980 | |
700 | 1 | |a Sells, Peter, |d 1957- |e editor. |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n90694836 | |
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830 | 0 | |a Typological studies in language ; |v v. 116. |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n83715308 | |
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author2 | Matsumoto, Yoshiko, 1954- Comrie, Bernard, 1947- Sells, Peter, 1957- |
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contents | Intro -- Noun-Modifying Clause Constructions in Languages of Eurasia -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- Preface -- Noun-modifying clause constructions in languages of Eurasia -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The construction under investigation -- 2.1 Types of NMCC -- 2.2 Generalized relative clauses and "aboutness relatives" -- 3. Possible common properties of the languages in the investigation -- 4. Questions investigated -- 5. Chapters in the book -- 6. Key terminology -- References -- General noun-modifying clause constructions in Japanese -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Properties of the General Noun Modifying Clause Construction (GNMCC) in Japanese -- 3. Possible relations of the head noun to the modifying clause -- 3.1 Clause-host type GNMCCs (Argument, adjunct and frame NMCCs) -- 3.2 Noun-host type GNMCCs (Content noun NMCCs) -- 3.3 Clause and noun-host type GNMCCs (Relational/perceptional noun NMCCs) -- 4. Determining factors for acceptable constructions -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- The attributive versus final distinction and the manifestation of "main clause phenomena" in Japanese and Korean noun modifying clause constructions -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Noun-modifying clause constructions and attributive predicate forms -- 3. 'Main clause phenomena' in Japanese and Korean NMCCs -- 4. Further infiltration of main clause phenomena into Japanese NMCCs: Emergence of the 'less overt' clause linkage devices marking direct quotation -- 5. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Noun-modifying constructions in Korean -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Forms and functions of NMCCs -- 2.1 Overview of morphology -- 2.2 Relative clauses: Basic patterns -- 2.3 Noun complement clauses -- 2.4 Other complement-like clauses -- 2.4.1 Perception noun complements -- 2.4.2 Arguments of relational nouns. 2.5 Obliquely related modifying clauses -- 2.6 Modifying clauses with multiple nominative sources -- 3. Limits of NMCCs -- 3.1 Extended relativization examples -- 3.2 Consequential calculation -- 3.3 Limits on apparent relative clauses -- 4. Island effects in relative clauses -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- Noun-modifying clause constructions in Sino-Tibetan languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Sino-Tibetan -- 3. Modern Mandarin -- 4. Discussion -- References -- Noun-modifying clauses in Cantonese -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Typological properties of Cantonese -- 3. Forms and functions of noun-modifying clauses -- 3.1 Noun modification in Mandarin and Cantonese -- 3.2 Typology of NMCCs -- 3.2.1 Argument NMCCs -- 3.2.2 Adjunct NMCCs -- 3.3 Extended NMCCs -- 3.3.1 Frame NMCCs -- 3.3.2 Content noun NMCCs -- 3.4 Pragmatics and ambiguous NMCCs -- 4. Conclusions -- Acknowledgements -- References -- General noun-modifying clause constructions in Hinuq and Bezhta, with a note on other Daghestanian languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. GNMCCs with a coreferential element in the modifying clause and "accessibility" -- 2.1 The "gap" strategy -- 2.1.1 The understood coreferential noun phrase in the modifying clause is an argument -- 2.1.2 "Relativization" of adjuncts -- 2.2 Resumptive pronouns -- 3. GNMCCs without a coreferential noun phrase in the modifying clause -- 3.1 Other components of the Frame -- Consequence/result -- Reverse condition -- Purpose -- Requisite -- 3.2 Sentential complements of nouns -- Nouns of communication -- Nouns of thought and feeling -- Other content-taking nouns as heads -- Other types -- 4. Coreference across clause boundaries -- 5. Other Nakh-Daghestanian languages -- 6. Conclusions and interpretations -- 7. A note on Tsez -- Acknowledgements -- References. The general noun-modifying clause construction in Tundra Nenets and its possible origin -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The basic properties of the language -- 3. Relative clauses -- 4. Noun complementation -- 5. General noun-modifying clause constructions -- 5.1 Relativization-like function -- 5.2 Extended functions -- 6. GNMCCs and noun-noun compounds -- 7. Remarks about diachrony -- References -- Noun-modifying constructions and relativization in the central and western Caucasus -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Survey of relativization strategies and GNMCC's -- 2.1 Nakh-Daghestanian -- 2.2 Ossetic (Digor dialect) -- 2.3 West Caucasian -- 2.4 Kartvelian -- 3. Survey of other relevant typological variables -- 3.1 Constraints on relativization: Role and/or case of RN -- 3.2 Preferred case or role, based on text frequency counts -- 3.3 Core chaining -- 3.4 Relationship of relativization to core chaining -- 3.5 Agreement and how it works -- 3.6 Survey: Summary -- 4. Conclusions -- References -- Noun-modifying clause constructions in Ainu -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Basic properties of Ainu -- 2.1 Basic clause types in Ainu -- 2.2 Noun phrase structure -- 3. Noun-modifying clause constructions in Ainu: Relative clauses vs. noun-complement clauses -- 4. Relative clauses -- 4.1 Relativization of arguments -- 4.1.1 Subject of intransitive verb (S) -- 4.1.2 Subject of two-place transitive verb (A) -- 4.1.3 Subject of three-place transitive verb (A) -- 4.1.4 Object of two-place transitive (O) -- 4.1.5 Object of three-place transitive (O) -- 4.2 Relativization of non-arguments -- 4.2.1 Relativization of adjuncts -- 4.2.2 Relativization of possessor -- 4.2.3 Relativization of locative and allative adjuncts -- 5. Noun-complement clauses -- 5.1 Content-taking nouns as head -- 5.2 Perception nouns as head -- 5.3 Relational nouns as head. 6. Grammaticalization of noun-modifying clause constructions -- 6.1 Relative clause construction with bound nouns as head> lexical nominalizations -- 6.2 Noun-complement clause construction with perception nouns as head> 'mermaid construction' -- 6.3 Noun-complement clause construction with relational nouns as head> subordinate temporal clause construction -- 7. Noun + noun compounds -- 8. Emergent GNMCC -- 9. Island violation -- 10. Concluding remarks -- Acknowledgements -- Sources -- References -- Turkish and Turkic complex noun phrase constructions -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Turkish and Sakha constructions headed by a noun or noun phrase: Brief description of their basic properties -- 2.1 Turkish -- 2.1.1 Turkish N-complement clause constructions as phrasal compounds -- 2.1.2 Turkish relative clause constructions as nominal phrases with "adjectival" modifiers -- 2.1.3 Relative clauses have gaps, N-complement clause constructions do not -- 2.1.4 Additional morpho-syntactic properties of relative clauses which are different from those of noun-complement constructions in Turkish -- 2.2 Sakha: More Japanese-like, but not completely -- 3. Brief comparison of island violations, gapless RCs, and CNPs with loose head-to-clause connections -- 3.1 Sakha -- 3.1.1 Island violations in Sakha -- 3.1.2 Gapless RCs in Sakha -- 3.1.3 CNPs with loose head-to-clause connection in Sakha -- 3.2 Turkish -- 3.2.1 Island violations in Turkish -- 3.2.2 Gapless RCs in Turkish -- 3.2.3 CNPs with loose head-to-clause connections in Turkish -- 4. Returning to questions about syntactic islands -- 4.1 Apparent island violations -- 4.2 Apparently gapless relative clauses are gapped relative clauses targeting obliques -- 5. Resumptive pronouns: To what extent are they optional or obligatory, and in what contexts? -- 5.1 Resumptive pronouns in Sakha. 5.2 Resumptive pronouns in Turkish -- 6. Islands in Sakha and Turkish: More on resumption, and effects of the islands' placement in the matrix -- 6.1 Sakha -- 6.1.1 A well-formed instance of resumption as a saving device -- 6.1.2 Ill-formed instances of resumption in Sakha island violations -- 6.2 Turkish -- 6.3 Comparisons -- 7. Summary and conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Noun-modifying constructions in Marathi -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Noun-modifying constructions (NMCs) in Marathi -- 2.1 Relativizing NMCs -- (A) "Gap" type relativizing NMCs -- (B) Non-reduction strategy: The relative-corelative type of relativizing NMC -- (C) So-called "fused" relatives -- 2.2 Beyond accessibility -- 2.2.1 Reduced valency prenominal relatives -- 2.2.2 Verb-gapped prenominal relatives -- 2.2.3 Gapping NMCs with unpredictable (non-compositional) semantics -- 2.2.4 Gapless NMCs with sensory and circumstantial head nouns -- 2.3 Noun-complement NMCs -- 2.4 The short prenominal NMC -- 2.5 The short relative-corelative construction -- 3. Other functions of NMCs in '-lel'- and '-ṇār' -- 3.1 As a complementizer -- 3.2 As insubordinate "finite" verbs (Evans 2007) -- 4. Marathi NMCs: Historical remarks -- 5. Suggestions for further investigation and concluding remarks -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Conclusion -- 1. The geographic extent of GNMCCs in Eurasia -- 2. Competition with other constructions -- 3. Factors that promote or hinder the presence of GNMCCs -- References -- Examples to explore in noun-modifying constructions -- A. Basic structures -- background -- questions/ examples -- B. Detailed elicitation of NMCs -- B1. Relative clause equivalents -- B2. Sentential complement of noun -- Nouns of communication as head -- Nouns of thoughts and feeling as head -- Other content-taking nouns as head -- B3. Other types of NMC -- Relational nouns as head. |
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ind2="0"><subfield code="a">Noun-modifying clause constructions in languages of Eurasia :</subfield><subfield code="b">rethinking theoretical and geographical boundaries /</subfield><subfield code="c">edited by Yoshiko Matsumoto, Bernard Comrie, Peter Sells.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="264" ind1=" " ind2="1"><subfield code="a">Amsterdam ;</subfield><subfield code="a">Philadelphia :</subfield><subfield code="b">John Benjamins Publishing Company,</subfield><subfield code="c">[2017]</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="300" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">1 online resource</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="336" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">text</subfield><subfield code="b">txt</subfield><subfield code="2">rdacontent</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="337" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">computer</subfield><subfield code="b">c</subfield><subfield code="2">rdamedia</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="338" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">online resource</subfield><subfield code="b">cr</subfield><subfield code="2">rdacarrier</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="490" ind1="1" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Typological studies in language,</subfield><subfield code="x">0167-7373 ;</subfield><subfield code="v">volume 116</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="504" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Includes bibliographical references and index.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="588" ind1="0" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Print version record and CIP data provided by publisher.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="0" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Intro -- Noun-Modifying Clause Constructions in Languages of Eurasia -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- Preface -- Noun-modifying clause constructions in languages of Eurasia -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The construction under investigation -- 2.1 Types of NMCC -- 2.2 Generalized relative clauses and "aboutness relatives" -- 3. Possible common properties of the languages in the investigation -- 4. Questions investigated -- 5. Chapters in the book -- 6. Key terminology -- References -- General noun-modifying clause constructions in Japanese -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Properties of the General Noun Modifying Clause Construction (GNMCC) in Japanese -- 3. Possible relations of the head noun to the modifying clause -- 3.1 Clause-host type GNMCCs (Argument, adjunct and frame NMCCs) -- 3.2 Noun-host type GNMCCs (Content noun NMCCs) -- 3.3 Clause and noun-host type GNMCCs (Relational/perceptional noun NMCCs) -- 4. Determining factors for acceptable constructions -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- The attributive versus final distinction and the manifestation of "main clause phenomena" in Japanese and Korean noun modifying clause constructions -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Noun-modifying clause constructions and attributive predicate forms -- 3. 'Main clause phenomena' in Japanese and Korean NMCCs -- 4. Further infiltration of main clause phenomena into Japanese NMCCs: Emergence of the 'less overt' clause linkage devices marking direct quotation -- 5. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Noun-modifying constructions in Korean -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Forms and functions of NMCCs -- 2.1 Overview of morphology -- 2.2 Relative clauses: Basic patterns -- 2.3 Noun complement clauses -- 2.4 Other complement-like clauses -- 2.4.1 Perception noun complements -- 2.4.2 Arguments of relational nouns.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">2.5 Obliquely related modifying clauses -- 2.6 Modifying clauses with multiple nominative sources -- 3. Limits of NMCCs -- 3.1 Extended relativization examples -- 3.2 Consequential calculation -- 3.3 Limits on apparent relative clauses -- 4. Island effects in relative clauses -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- Noun-modifying clause constructions in Sino-Tibetan languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Sino-Tibetan -- 3. Modern Mandarin -- 4. Discussion -- References -- Noun-modifying clauses in Cantonese -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Typological properties of Cantonese -- 3. Forms and functions of noun-modifying clauses -- 3.1 Noun modification in Mandarin and Cantonese -- 3.2 Typology of NMCCs -- 3.2.1 Argument NMCCs -- 3.2.2 Adjunct NMCCs -- 3.3 Extended NMCCs -- 3.3.1 Frame NMCCs -- 3.3.2 Content noun NMCCs -- 3.4 Pragmatics and ambiguous NMCCs -- 4. Conclusions -- Acknowledgements -- References -- General noun-modifying clause constructions in Hinuq and Bezhta, with a note on other Daghestanian languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. GNMCCs with a coreferential element in the modifying clause and "accessibility" -- 2.1 The "gap" strategy -- 2.1.1 The understood coreferential noun phrase in the modifying clause is an argument -- 2.1.2 "Relativization" of adjuncts -- 2.2 Resumptive pronouns -- 3. GNMCCs without a coreferential noun phrase in the modifying clause -- 3.1 Other components of the Frame -- Consequence/result -- Reverse condition -- Purpose -- Requisite -- 3.2 Sentential complements of nouns -- Nouns of communication -- Nouns of thought and feeling -- Other content-taking nouns as heads -- Other types -- 4. Coreference across clause boundaries -- 5. Other Nakh-Daghestanian languages -- 6. Conclusions and interpretations -- 7. A note on Tsez -- Acknowledgements -- References.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">The general noun-modifying clause construction in Tundra Nenets and its possible origin -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The basic properties of the language -- 3. Relative clauses -- 4. Noun complementation -- 5. General noun-modifying clause constructions -- 5.1 Relativization-like function -- 5.2 Extended functions -- 6. GNMCCs and noun-noun compounds -- 7. Remarks about diachrony -- References -- Noun-modifying constructions and relativization in the central and western Caucasus -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Survey of relativization strategies and GNMCC's -- 2.1 Nakh-Daghestanian -- 2.2 Ossetic (Digor dialect) -- 2.3 West Caucasian -- 2.4 Kartvelian -- 3. Survey of other relevant typological variables -- 3.1 Constraints on relativization: Role and/or case of RN -- 3.2 Preferred case or role, based on text frequency counts -- 3.3 Core chaining -- 3.4 Relationship of relativization to core chaining -- 3.5 Agreement and how it works -- 3.6 Survey: Summary -- 4. Conclusions -- References -- Noun-modifying clause constructions in Ainu -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Basic properties of Ainu -- 2.1 Basic clause types in Ainu -- 2.2 Noun phrase structure -- 3. Noun-modifying clause constructions in Ainu: Relative clauses vs. noun-complement clauses -- 4. Relative clauses -- 4.1 Relativization of arguments -- 4.1.1 Subject of intransitive verb (S) -- 4.1.2 Subject of two-place transitive verb (A) -- 4.1.3 Subject of three-place transitive verb (A) -- 4.1.4 Object of two-place transitive (O) -- 4.1.5 Object of three-place transitive (O) -- 4.2 Relativization of non-arguments -- 4.2.1 Relativization of adjuncts -- 4.2.2 Relativization of possessor -- 4.2.3 Relativization of locative and allative adjuncts -- 5. Noun-complement clauses -- 5.1 Content-taking nouns as head -- 5.2 Perception nouns as head -- 5.3 Relational nouns as head.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">6. Grammaticalization of noun-modifying clause constructions -- 6.1 Relative clause construction with bound nouns as head> lexical nominalizations -- 6.2 Noun-complement clause construction with perception nouns as head> 'mermaid construction' -- 6.3 Noun-complement clause construction with relational nouns as head> subordinate temporal clause construction -- 7. Noun + noun compounds -- 8. Emergent GNMCC -- 9. Island violation -- 10. Concluding remarks -- Acknowledgements -- Sources -- References -- Turkish and Turkic complex noun phrase constructions -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Turkish and Sakha constructions headed by a noun or noun phrase: Brief description of their basic properties -- 2.1 Turkish -- 2.1.1 Turkish N-complement clause constructions as phrasal compounds -- 2.1.2 Turkish relative clause constructions as nominal phrases with "adjectival" modifiers -- 2.1.3 Relative clauses have gaps, N-complement clause constructions do not -- 2.1.4 Additional morpho-syntactic properties of relative clauses which are different from those of noun-complement constructions in Turkish -- 2.2 Sakha: More Japanese-like, but not completely -- 3. Brief comparison of island violations, gapless RCs, and CNPs with loose head-to-clause connections -- 3.1 Sakha -- 3.1.1 Island violations in Sakha -- 3.1.2 Gapless RCs in Sakha -- 3.1.3 CNPs with loose head-to-clause connection in Sakha -- 3.2 Turkish -- 3.2.1 Island violations in Turkish -- 3.2.2 Gapless RCs in Turkish -- 3.2.3 CNPs with loose head-to-clause connections in Turkish -- 4. Returning to questions about syntactic islands -- 4.1 Apparent island violations -- 4.2 Apparently gapless relative clauses are gapped relative clauses targeting obliques -- 5. Resumptive pronouns: To what extent are they optional or obligatory, and in what contexts? -- 5.1 Resumptive pronouns in Sakha.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">5.2 Resumptive pronouns in Turkish -- 6. Islands in Sakha and Turkish: More on resumption, and effects of the islands' placement in the matrix -- 6.1 Sakha -- 6.1.1 A well-formed instance of resumption as a saving device -- 6.1.2 Ill-formed instances of resumption in Sakha island violations -- 6.2 Turkish -- 6.3 Comparisons -- 7. Summary and conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Noun-modifying constructions in Marathi -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Noun-modifying constructions (NMCs) in Marathi -- 2.1 Relativizing NMCs -- (A) "Gap" type relativizing NMCs -- (B) Non-reduction strategy: The relative-corelative type of relativizing NMC -- (C) So-called "fused" relatives -- 2.2 Beyond accessibility -- 2.2.1 Reduced valency prenominal relatives -- 2.2.2 Verb-gapped prenominal relatives -- 2.2.3 Gapping NMCs with unpredictable (non-compositional) semantics -- 2.2.4 Gapless NMCs with sensory and circumstantial head nouns -- 2.3 Noun-complement NMCs -- 2.4 The short prenominal NMC -- 2.5 The short relative-corelative construction -- 3. Other functions of NMCs in '-lel'- and '-ṇār' -- 3.1 As a complementizer -- 3.2 As insubordinate "finite" verbs (Evans 2007) -- 4. Marathi NMCs: Historical remarks -- 5. Suggestions for further investigation and concluding remarks -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Conclusion -- 1. The geographic extent of GNMCCs in Eurasia -- 2. Competition with other constructions -- 3. Factors that promote or hinder the presence of GNMCCs -- References -- Examples to explore in noun-modifying constructions -- A. Basic structures -- background -- questions/ examples -- B. Detailed elicitation of NMCs -- B1. Relative clause equivalents -- B2. Sentential complement of noun -- Nouns of communication as head -- Nouns of thoughts and feeling as head -- Other content-taking nouns as head -- B3. 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genre | Electronic book. |
genre_facet | Electronic book. |
geographic | Eurasia Languages. Eurasia fast |
geographic_facet | Eurasia Languages. Eurasia |
id | ZDB-4-EBA-ocn969439649 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-11-27T13:27:38Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9789027266132 9027266131 |
issn | 0167-7373 ; |
language | English |
lccn | 2017002489 |
oclc_num | 969439649 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | MAIN DE-863 DE-BY-FWS |
owner_facet | MAIN DE-863 DE-BY-FWS |
physical | 1 online resource |
psigel | ZDB-4-EBA |
publishDate | 2017 |
publishDateSearch | 2017 |
publishDateSort | 2017 |
publisher | John Benjamins Publishing Company, |
record_format | marc |
series | Typological studies in language ; |
series2 | Typological studies in language, |
spelling | Noun-modifying clause constructions in languages of Eurasia : rethinking theoretical and geographical boundaries / edited by Yoshiko Matsumoto, Bernard Comrie, Peter Sells. Amsterdam ; Philadelphia : John Benjamins Publishing Company, [2017] 1 online resource text txt rdacontent computer c rdamedia online resource cr rdacarrier Typological studies in language, 0167-7373 ; volume 116 Includes bibliographical references and index. Print version record and CIP data provided by publisher. Intro -- Noun-Modifying Clause Constructions in Languages of Eurasia -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- Preface -- Noun-modifying clause constructions in languages of Eurasia -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The construction under investigation -- 2.1 Types of NMCC -- 2.2 Generalized relative clauses and "aboutness relatives" -- 3. Possible common properties of the languages in the investigation -- 4. Questions investigated -- 5. Chapters in the book -- 6. Key terminology -- References -- General noun-modifying clause constructions in Japanese -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Properties of the General Noun Modifying Clause Construction (GNMCC) in Japanese -- 3. Possible relations of the head noun to the modifying clause -- 3.1 Clause-host type GNMCCs (Argument, adjunct and frame NMCCs) -- 3.2 Noun-host type GNMCCs (Content noun NMCCs) -- 3.3 Clause and noun-host type GNMCCs (Relational/perceptional noun NMCCs) -- 4. Determining factors for acceptable constructions -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- The attributive versus final distinction and the manifestation of "main clause phenomena" in Japanese and Korean noun modifying clause constructions -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Noun-modifying clause constructions and attributive predicate forms -- 3. 'Main clause phenomena' in Japanese and Korean NMCCs -- 4. Further infiltration of main clause phenomena into Japanese NMCCs: Emergence of the 'less overt' clause linkage devices marking direct quotation -- 5. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Noun-modifying constructions in Korean -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Forms and functions of NMCCs -- 2.1 Overview of morphology -- 2.2 Relative clauses: Basic patterns -- 2.3 Noun complement clauses -- 2.4 Other complement-like clauses -- 2.4.1 Perception noun complements -- 2.4.2 Arguments of relational nouns. 2.5 Obliquely related modifying clauses -- 2.6 Modifying clauses with multiple nominative sources -- 3. Limits of NMCCs -- 3.1 Extended relativization examples -- 3.2 Consequential calculation -- 3.3 Limits on apparent relative clauses -- 4. Island effects in relative clauses -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- Noun-modifying clause constructions in Sino-Tibetan languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Sino-Tibetan -- 3. Modern Mandarin -- 4. Discussion -- References -- Noun-modifying clauses in Cantonese -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Typological properties of Cantonese -- 3. Forms and functions of noun-modifying clauses -- 3.1 Noun modification in Mandarin and Cantonese -- 3.2 Typology of NMCCs -- 3.2.1 Argument NMCCs -- 3.2.2 Adjunct NMCCs -- 3.3 Extended NMCCs -- 3.3.1 Frame NMCCs -- 3.3.2 Content noun NMCCs -- 3.4 Pragmatics and ambiguous NMCCs -- 4. Conclusions -- Acknowledgements -- References -- General noun-modifying clause constructions in Hinuq and Bezhta, with a note on other Daghestanian languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. GNMCCs with a coreferential element in the modifying clause and "accessibility" -- 2.1 The "gap" strategy -- 2.1.1 The understood coreferential noun phrase in the modifying clause is an argument -- 2.1.2 "Relativization" of adjuncts -- 2.2 Resumptive pronouns -- 3. GNMCCs without a coreferential noun phrase in the modifying clause -- 3.1 Other components of the Frame -- Consequence/result -- Reverse condition -- Purpose -- Requisite -- 3.2 Sentential complements of nouns -- Nouns of communication -- Nouns of thought and feeling -- Other content-taking nouns as heads -- Other types -- 4. Coreference across clause boundaries -- 5. Other Nakh-Daghestanian languages -- 6. Conclusions and interpretations -- 7. A note on Tsez -- Acknowledgements -- References. The general noun-modifying clause construction in Tundra Nenets and its possible origin -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The basic properties of the language -- 3. Relative clauses -- 4. Noun complementation -- 5. General noun-modifying clause constructions -- 5.1 Relativization-like function -- 5.2 Extended functions -- 6. GNMCCs and noun-noun compounds -- 7. Remarks about diachrony -- References -- Noun-modifying constructions and relativization in the central and western Caucasus -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Survey of relativization strategies and GNMCC's -- 2.1 Nakh-Daghestanian -- 2.2 Ossetic (Digor dialect) -- 2.3 West Caucasian -- 2.4 Kartvelian -- 3. Survey of other relevant typological variables -- 3.1 Constraints on relativization: Role and/or case of RN -- 3.2 Preferred case or role, based on text frequency counts -- 3.3 Core chaining -- 3.4 Relationship of relativization to core chaining -- 3.5 Agreement and how it works -- 3.6 Survey: Summary -- 4. Conclusions -- References -- Noun-modifying clause constructions in Ainu -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Basic properties of Ainu -- 2.1 Basic clause types in Ainu -- 2.2 Noun phrase structure -- 3. Noun-modifying clause constructions in Ainu: Relative clauses vs. noun-complement clauses -- 4. Relative clauses -- 4.1 Relativization of arguments -- 4.1.1 Subject of intransitive verb (S) -- 4.1.2 Subject of two-place transitive verb (A) -- 4.1.3 Subject of three-place transitive verb (A) -- 4.1.4 Object of two-place transitive (O) -- 4.1.5 Object of three-place transitive (O) -- 4.2 Relativization of non-arguments -- 4.2.1 Relativization of adjuncts -- 4.2.2 Relativization of possessor -- 4.2.3 Relativization of locative and allative adjuncts -- 5. Noun-complement clauses -- 5.1 Content-taking nouns as head -- 5.2 Perception nouns as head -- 5.3 Relational nouns as head. 6. Grammaticalization of noun-modifying clause constructions -- 6.1 Relative clause construction with bound nouns as head> lexical nominalizations -- 6.2 Noun-complement clause construction with perception nouns as head> 'mermaid construction' -- 6.3 Noun-complement clause construction with relational nouns as head> subordinate temporal clause construction -- 7. Noun + noun compounds -- 8. Emergent GNMCC -- 9. Island violation -- 10. Concluding remarks -- Acknowledgements -- Sources -- References -- Turkish and Turkic complex noun phrase constructions -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Turkish and Sakha constructions headed by a noun or noun phrase: Brief description of their basic properties -- 2.1 Turkish -- 2.1.1 Turkish N-complement clause constructions as phrasal compounds -- 2.1.2 Turkish relative clause constructions as nominal phrases with "adjectival" modifiers -- 2.1.3 Relative clauses have gaps, N-complement clause constructions do not -- 2.1.4 Additional morpho-syntactic properties of relative clauses which are different from those of noun-complement constructions in Turkish -- 2.2 Sakha: More Japanese-like, but not completely -- 3. Brief comparison of island violations, gapless RCs, and CNPs with loose head-to-clause connections -- 3.1 Sakha -- 3.1.1 Island violations in Sakha -- 3.1.2 Gapless RCs in Sakha -- 3.1.3 CNPs with loose head-to-clause connection in Sakha -- 3.2 Turkish -- 3.2.1 Island violations in Turkish -- 3.2.2 Gapless RCs in Turkish -- 3.2.3 CNPs with loose head-to-clause connections in Turkish -- 4. Returning to questions about syntactic islands -- 4.1 Apparent island violations -- 4.2 Apparently gapless relative clauses are gapped relative clauses targeting obliques -- 5. Resumptive pronouns: To what extent are they optional or obligatory, and in what contexts? -- 5.1 Resumptive pronouns in Sakha. 5.2 Resumptive pronouns in Turkish -- 6. Islands in Sakha and Turkish: More on resumption, and effects of the islands' placement in the matrix -- 6.1 Sakha -- 6.1.1 A well-formed instance of resumption as a saving device -- 6.1.2 Ill-formed instances of resumption in Sakha island violations -- 6.2 Turkish -- 6.3 Comparisons -- 7. Summary and conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Noun-modifying constructions in Marathi -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Noun-modifying constructions (NMCs) in Marathi -- 2.1 Relativizing NMCs -- (A) "Gap" type relativizing NMCs -- (B) Non-reduction strategy: The relative-corelative type of relativizing NMC -- (C) So-called "fused" relatives -- 2.2 Beyond accessibility -- 2.2.1 Reduced valency prenominal relatives -- 2.2.2 Verb-gapped prenominal relatives -- 2.2.3 Gapping NMCs with unpredictable (non-compositional) semantics -- 2.2.4 Gapless NMCs with sensory and circumstantial head nouns -- 2.3 Noun-complement NMCs -- 2.4 The short prenominal NMC -- 2.5 The short relative-corelative construction -- 3. Other functions of NMCs in '-lel'- and '-ṇār' -- 3.1 As a complementizer -- 3.2 As insubordinate "finite" verbs (Evans 2007) -- 4. Marathi NMCs: Historical remarks -- 5. Suggestions for further investigation and concluding remarks -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Conclusion -- 1. The geographic extent of GNMCCs in Eurasia -- 2. Competition with other constructions -- 3. Factors that promote or hinder the presence of GNMCCs -- References -- Examples to explore in noun-modifying constructions -- A. Basic structures -- background -- questions/ examples -- B. Detailed elicitation of NMCs -- B1. Relative clause equivalents -- B2. Sentential complement of noun -- Nouns of communication as head -- Nouns of thoughts and feeling as head -- Other content-taking nouns as head -- B3. Other types of NMC -- Relational nouns as head. Grammar, Comparative and general Relative clauses. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056327 Grammar, Comparative and general Noun phrase. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056310 Grammar, Comparative and general Syntax. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056338 Languages in contact Eurasia. Eurasia Languages. Typology (Linguistics) http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85139174 Relatives. Syntaxe. Langues en contact Eurasie. Typologie (Linguistique) LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES Grammar & Punctuation. bisacsh LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES Linguistics Syntax. bisacsh Grammar, Comparative and general Noun phrase fast Grammar, Comparative and general Relative clauses fast Grammar, Comparative and general Syntax fast Language and languages fast Languages in contact fast Typology (Linguistics) fast Eurasia fast Electronic book. Matsumoto, Yoshiko, 1954- editor. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/nr97004673 Comrie, Bernard, 1947- editor. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n79117980 Sells, Peter, 1957- editor. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n90694836 has work: Noun-modifying clause constructions in languages of Eurasia (Text) https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PCG6Qry9x9MYDqMBrdcmKMK https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/ontology/hasWork Print version: Noun-modifying clause constructions in languages of Eurasia. Amsterdam ; Philadelphia : John Benjamins Publishing Company, [2017] 9789027206978 (DLC) 2016042020 Typological studies in language ; v. 116. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n83715308 FWS01 ZDB-4-EBA FWS_PDA_EBA https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=1468266 Volltext |
spellingShingle | Noun-modifying clause constructions in languages of Eurasia : rethinking theoretical and geographical boundaries / Typological studies in language ; Intro -- Noun-Modifying Clause Constructions in Languages of Eurasia -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- Preface -- Noun-modifying clause constructions in languages of Eurasia -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The construction under investigation -- 2.1 Types of NMCC -- 2.2 Generalized relative clauses and "aboutness relatives" -- 3. Possible common properties of the languages in the investigation -- 4. Questions investigated -- 5. Chapters in the book -- 6. Key terminology -- References -- General noun-modifying clause constructions in Japanese -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Properties of the General Noun Modifying Clause Construction (GNMCC) in Japanese -- 3. Possible relations of the head noun to the modifying clause -- 3.1 Clause-host type GNMCCs (Argument, adjunct and frame NMCCs) -- 3.2 Noun-host type GNMCCs (Content noun NMCCs) -- 3.3 Clause and noun-host type GNMCCs (Relational/perceptional noun NMCCs) -- 4. Determining factors for acceptable constructions -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- The attributive versus final distinction and the manifestation of "main clause phenomena" in Japanese and Korean noun modifying clause constructions -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Noun-modifying clause constructions and attributive predicate forms -- 3. 'Main clause phenomena' in Japanese and Korean NMCCs -- 4. Further infiltration of main clause phenomena into Japanese NMCCs: Emergence of the 'less overt' clause linkage devices marking direct quotation -- 5. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Noun-modifying constructions in Korean -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Forms and functions of NMCCs -- 2.1 Overview of morphology -- 2.2 Relative clauses: Basic patterns -- 2.3 Noun complement clauses -- 2.4 Other complement-like clauses -- 2.4.1 Perception noun complements -- 2.4.2 Arguments of relational nouns. 2.5 Obliquely related modifying clauses -- 2.6 Modifying clauses with multiple nominative sources -- 3. Limits of NMCCs -- 3.1 Extended relativization examples -- 3.2 Consequential calculation -- 3.3 Limits on apparent relative clauses -- 4. Island effects in relative clauses -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- Noun-modifying clause constructions in Sino-Tibetan languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Sino-Tibetan -- 3. Modern Mandarin -- 4. Discussion -- References -- Noun-modifying clauses in Cantonese -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Typological properties of Cantonese -- 3. Forms and functions of noun-modifying clauses -- 3.1 Noun modification in Mandarin and Cantonese -- 3.2 Typology of NMCCs -- 3.2.1 Argument NMCCs -- 3.2.2 Adjunct NMCCs -- 3.3 Extended NMCCs -- 3.3.1 Frame NMCCs -- 3.3.2 Content noun NMCCs -- 3.4 Pragmatics and ambiguous NMCCs -- 4. Conclusions -- Acknowledgements -- References -- General noun-modifying clause constructions in Hinuq and Bezhta, with a note on other Daghestanian languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. GNMCCs with a coreferential element in the modifying clause and "accessibility" -- 2.1 The "gap" strategy -- 2.1.1 The understood coreferential noun phrase in the modifying clause is an argument -- 2.1.2 "Relativization" of adjuncts -- 2.2 Resumptive pronouns -- 3. GNMCCs without a coreferential noun phrase in the modifying clause -- 3.1 Other components of the Frame -- Consequence/result -- Reverse condition -- Purpose -- Requisite -- 3.2 Sentential complements of nouns -- Nouns of communication -- Nouns of thought and feeling -- Other content-taking nouns as heads -- Other types -- 4. Coreference across clause boundaries -- 5. Other Nakh-Daghestanian languages -- 6. Conclusions and interpretations -- 7. A note on Tsez -- Acknowledgements -- References. The general noun-modifying clause construction in Tundra Nenets and its possible origin -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The basic properties of the language -- 3. Relative clauses -- 4. Noun complementation -- 5. General noun-modifying clause constructions -- 5.1 Relativization-like function -- 5.2 Extended functions -- 6. GNMCCs and noun-noun compounds -- 7. Remarks about diachrony -- References -- Noun-modifying constructions and relativization in the central and western Caucasus -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Survey of relativization strategies and GNMCC's -- 2.1 Nakh-Daghestanian -- 2.2 Ossetic (Digor dialect) -- 2.3 West Caucasian -- 2.4 Kartvelian -- 3. Survey of other relevant typological variables -- 3.1 Constraints on relativization: Role and/or case of RN -- 3.2 Preferred case or role, based on text frequency counts -- 3.3 Core chaining -- 3.4 Relationship of relativization to core chaining -- 3.5 Agreement and how it works -- 3.6 Survey: Summary -- 4. Conclusions -- References -- Noun-modifying clause constructions in Ainu -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Basic properties of Ainu -- 2.1 Basic clause types in Ainu -- 2.2 Noun phrase structure -- 3. Noun-modifying clause constructions in Ainu: Relative clauses vs. noun-complement clauses -- 4. Relative clauses -- 4.1 Relativization of arguments -- 4.1.1 Subject of intransitive verb (S) -- 4.1.2 Subject of two-place transitive verb (A) -- 4.1.3 Subject of three-place transitive verb (A) -- 4.1.4 Object of two-place transitive (O) -- 4.1.5 Object of three-place transitive (O) -- 4.2 Relativization of non-arguments -- 4.2.1 Relativization of adjuncts -- 4.2.2 Relativization of possessor -- 4.2.3 Relativization of locative and allative adjuncts -- 5. Noun-complement clauses -- 5.1 Content-taking nouns as head -- 5.2 Perception nouns as head -- 5.3 Relational nouns as head. 6. Grammaticalization of noun-modifying clause constructions -- 6.1 Relative clause construction with bound nouns as head> lexical nominalizations -- 6.2 Noun-complement clause construction with perception nouns as head> 'mermaid construction' -- 6.3 Noun-complement clause construction with relational nouns as head> subordinate temporal clause construction -- 7. Noun + noun compounds -- 8. Emergent GNMCC -- 9. Island violation -- 10. Concluding remarks -- Acknowledgements -- Sources -- References -- Turkish and Turkic complex noun phrase constructions -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Turkish and Sakha constructions headed by a noun or noun phrase: Brief description of their basic properties -- 2.1 Turkish -- 2.1.1 Turkish N-complement clause constructions as phrasal compounds -- 2.1.2 Turkish relative clause constructions as nominal phrases with "adjectival" modifiers -- 2.1.3 Relative clauses have gaps, N-complement clause constructions do not -- 2.1.4 Additional morpho-syntactic properties of relative clauses which are different from those of noun-complement constructions in Turkish -- 2.2 Sakha: More Japanese-like, but not completely -- 3. Brief comparison of island violations, gapless RCs, and CNPs with loose head-to-clause connections -- 3.1 Sakha -- 3.1.1 Island violations in Sakha -- 3.1.2 Gapless RCs in Sakha -- 3.1.3 CNPs with loose head-to-clause connection in Sakha -- 3.2 Turkish -- 3.2.1 Island violations in Turkish -- 3.2.2 Gapless RCs in Turkish -- 3.2.3 CNPs with loose head-to-clause connections in Turkish -- 4. Returning to questions about syntactic islands -- 4.1 Apparent island violations -- 4.2 Apparently gapless relative clauses are gapped relative clauses targeting obliques -- 5. Resumptive pronouns: To what extent are they optional or obligatory, and in what contexts? -- 5.1 Resumptive pronouns in Sakha. 5.2 Resumptive pronouns in Turkish -- 6. Islands in Sakha and Turkish: More on resumption, and effects of the islands' placement in the matrix -- 6.1 Sakha -- 6.1.1 A well-formed instance of resumption as a saving device -- 6.1.2 Ill-formed instances of resumption in Sakha island violations -- 6.2 Turkish -- 6.3 Comparisons -- 7. Summary and conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Noun-modifying constructions in Marathi -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Noun-modifying constructions (NMCs) in Marathi -- 2.1 Relativizing NMCs -- (A) "Gap" type relativizing NMCs -- (B) Non-reduction strategy: The relative-corelative type of relativizing NMC -- (C) So-called "fused" relatives -- 2.2 Beyond accessibility -- 2.2.1 Reduced valency prenominal relatives -- 2.2.2 Verb-gapped prenominal relatives -- 2.2.3 Gapping NMCs with unpredictable (non-compositional) semantics -- 2.2.4 Gapless NMCs with sensory and circumstantial head nouns -- 2.3 Noun-complement NMCs -- 2.4 The short prenominal NMC -- 2.5 The short relative-corelative construction -- 3. Other functions of NMCs in '-lel'- and '-ṇār' -- 3.1 As a complementizer -- 3.2 As insubordinate "finite" verbs (Evans 2007) -- 4. Marathi NMCs: Historical remarks -- 5. Suggestions for further investigation and concluding remarks -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Conclusion -- 1. The geographic extent of GNMCCs in Eurasia -- 2. Competition with other constructions -- 3. Factors that promote or hinder the presence of GNMCCs -- References -- Examples to explore in noun-modifying constructions -- A. Basic structures -- background -- questions/ examples -- B. Detailed elicitation of NMCs -- B1. Relative clause equivalents -- B2. Sentential complement of noun -- Nouns of communication as head -- Nouns of thoughts and feeling as head -- Other content-taking nouns as head -- B3. Other types of NMC -- Relational nouns as head. Grammar, Comparative and general Relative clauses. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056327 Grammar, Comparative and general Noun phrase. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056310 Grammar, Comparative and general Syntax. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056338 Languages in contact Eurasia. Typology (Linguistics) http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85139174 Relatives. Syntaxe. Langues en contact Eurasie. Typologie (Linguistique) LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES Grammar & Punctuation. bisacsh LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES Linguistics Syntax. bisacsh Grammar, Comparative and general Noun phrase fast Grammar, Comparative and general Relative clauses fast Grammar, Comparative and general Syntax fast Language and languages fast Languages in contact fast Typology (Linguistics) fast |
subject_GND | http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056327 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056310 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056338 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85139174 |
title | Noun-modifying clause constructions in languages of Eurasia : rethinking theoretical and geographical boundaries / |
title_auth | Noun-modifying clause constructions in languages of Eurasia : rethinking theoretical and geographical boundaries / |
title_exact_search | Noun-modifying clause constructions in languages of Eurasia : rethinking theoretical and geographical boundaries / |
title_full | Noun-modifying clause constructions in languages of Eurasia : rethinking theoretical and geographical boundaries / edited by Yoshiko Matsumoto, Bernard Comrie, Peter Sells. |
title_fullStr | Noun-modifying clause constructions in languages of Eurasia : rethinking theoretical and geographical boundaries / edited by Yoshiko Matsumoto, Bernard Comrie, Peter Sells. |
title_full_unstemmed | Noun-modifying clause constructions in languages of Eurasia : rethinking theoretical and geographical boundaries / edited by Yoshiko Matsumoto, Bernard Comrie, Peter Sells. |
title_short | Noun-modifying clause constructions in languages of Eurasia : |
title_sort | noun modifying clause constructions in languages of eurasia rethinking theoretical and geographical boundaries |
title_sub | rethinking theoretical and geographical boundaries / |
topic | Grammar, Comparative and general Relative clauses. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056327 Grammar, Comparative and general Noun phrase. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056310 Grammar, Comparative and general Syntax. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056338 Languages in contact Eurasia. Typology (Linguistics) http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85139174 Relatives. Syntaxe. Langues en contact Eurasie. Typologie (Linguistique) LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES Grammar & Punctuation. bisacsh LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES Linguistics Syntax. bisacsh Grammar, Comparative and general Noun phrase fast Grammar, Comparative and general Relative clauses fast Grammar, Comparative and general Syntax fast Language and languages fast Languages in contact fast Typology (Linguistics) fast |
topic_facet | Grammar, Comparative and general Relative clauses. Grammar, Comparative and general Noun phrase. Grammar, Comparative and general Syntax. Languages in contact Eurasia. Eurasia Languages. Typology (Linguistics) Relatives. Syntaxe. Langues en contact Eurasie. Typologie (Linguistique) LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES Grammar & Punctuation. LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES Linguistics Syntax. Grammar, Comparative and general Noun phrase Grammar, Comparative and general Relative clauses Grammar, Comparative and general Syntax Language and languages Languages in contact Eurasia Electronic book. |
url | https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=1468266 |
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