Morphological and syntactic issues have received relatively little attention in Functional Grammar, due to the fact that this grammatical model, given its functional orientation, was primarily concerned with developing its pragmatic and semantic components. Now that these have been solidly developed, this book turns to the further development of the syntactic and morphological components of the model. Two recent developments receive pride of place: Bakker's Dynamic Expression Model and Hengeveld and Mackenzie's Functional Discourse Grammar. The first model aims at accounting for the complex interactions that one finds in many languages between the sets of expression rules that have to account for form on the one hand and those that establish order on the other. The second model takes a further step by considering morphosyntactic and phonological representations to be part of the underlying structure of the grammar rather than as the output of that grammar, contrary to the original assumptions in FG. The book accordingly contains synopses of these two proposals as well as applications of these to a variety of linguistic phenomena. Further articles provide detailed analyses of a range of semantic and pragmatic categories and their morphosyntactic expression in a wide variety of languages. The articles in this book contain data on some 60 different languages, including focused articles on phenomena in Arabic, Danish, English, Lengua de Señas Española, Mapudungun, Plains Cree, and Tanggu. In all, the contributions to this volume show that the issue of morphosyntactic expression in Functional Grammar is very much alive and moving into promising new directions, while at the same time contributing to a better understanding of a large number of morphosyntactic phenomena in a wide variety of languages.
Author(s): Casper De Groot
Series: Functional Grammar Series
Publisher: Walter De Gruyter Inc
Year: 2005
Language: English
Pages: 534
Preface......Page 6
Contents......Page 10
Agreement: More arguments for the dynamic expression model......Page 12
Constituent ordering in the expression component of Functional Grammar......Page 52
Dynamic expression in Functional Discourse Grammar......Page 64
Noun incorporation in Functional Discourse Grammar......Page 98
Morphosyntactic templates......Page 146
A crosslinguistic study of locative inversion: Evidence for the Functional Discourse Grammar model......Page 174
The agreement cross-reference continuum: Person marking in FG......Page 214
The explanatory power of typological hierarchies: Developmental perspectives on non-verbal predication......Page 260
Non-verbal predicability and copula support rule in Spanish Sign Language......Page 292
A new view on the semantics and pragmatics of operators of aspect, tense and quantification......Page 328
Exclamation: Sentence type, illocution or modality?......Page 362
Close appositions......Page 392
Inversion and the absence of grammatical relations in Plains Cree......Page 430
Direction diathesis and obviation in Functional Grammar: The case of the inverse in Mapudungun, an indigenous language of south central Chile......Page 458
Unexpected insertion or omission of an absolutive marker as an icon of a surprising turn of events in discourse......Page 494
Pronominal expression rule ordering in Danish and the question of a discourse grammar......Page 514
Index of names......Page 536
Index of languages......Page 540
Index of subjects......Page 542