Noun phrase structure in the languages of Europe /

The result of over five years of close collaboration among an international group of leading typologists within the EUROTYP program, this volume is about the morphology and syntax of the noun phrase. Particular attention is being paid to nominal inflectional categories and inflectional systems and t...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Corporate Authors: De Gruyter.
Group Author: Plank, Frans.
Published: De Gruyter Mouton,
Publisher Address: Berlin ;Boston :
Publication Dates: [2008]
©2003
Literature type: eBook
Language: English
Series: Empirical approaches to language typology [ealt] ; 20-7
Subjects:
Online Access: http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110197075
http://www.degruyter.com/doc/cover/9783110197075.jpg
Summary: The result of over five years of close collaboration among an international group of leading typologists within the EUROTYP program, this volume is about the morphology and syntax of the noun phrase. Particular attention is being paid to nominal inflectional categories and inflectional systems and to the syntax of determination, modification, and conjunction. Its areal focus, like that of other EUROTYP volumes, is on the languages of Europe; but in order to appreciate what is peculiarly European about their noun phrases, a more comprehensive and genuinely typological view is being taken at the full range of cross-linguistic variation within this structural domain. There has been no shortage lately of contributions to the theory of noun phrase structure; the present volume is, however, unique in the extent to which its theorizing is empirically grounded.
Carrier Form: 1 online resource (872pages)
ISBN: 9783110197075
Index Number: P380
CLC: H04
Contents: Frontmatter --
Contents detailed --
Contributors --
Abbreviations --
I. Introduction --
Noun phrase structure: An und f r sich, in time, and in space --
II. On inflection --
Nominal inflection galore: Daghestanian, with side glances at Europe and the world --
Inflectional morphology in the Hungarian noun phrase: A typological assessment --
The selective elaboration of nominal or pronominal inflection --
Types of typology, illustrated from gender systems --
III. On (over-)determination --
Double articulation --
Non-compositional definiteness marking in Hungarian noun phrases --
English goes Asian: Number and (in)definiteness in the Singlish noun phrase --
A woman of sin, a man of duty, and a hell of a mess: Non-determiner genitives in Swedish --
IV. On amplification --
The interaction between numerals and nouns --
Possessive noun phrases in the languages of Europe --
Action nominal constructions in the languages of Europe --
Noun phrase conjunction: The coordinative and the comitative strategy --
Backmatter --
Comments (0)