Ten Studies in Dependency Syntax

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The monograph presents the Meaning-Text approach applied to the domain of syntax from a typological angle; it deals with several long-standing syntactic problems on the basis of a dependency description. Its content can be presented in five parts + an Introduction: The Introduction explains the architecture of the book and sketches the Meaning-Text linguis-tic model, underlying the subsequent discussion. I. Surface-syntactic relations in the languages of the world, with special studies of subjects and objects. II. Grammatical voice in the dependency framework: the “passive” construction in Chinese. III. The relative clause: a calculus and analysis of possible types; the pseudo-relative (“headless”) clause. IV. Binary conjunctions (such as IF …, THEN …), free indefinite pronouns ([He went] nobody knows where), and syntactic idioms. V. Word order: linearization of dependency structures. The monograph offers a new perspective in syntactic studies. It is strongly typology-oriented (using the data from typologically diverse languages: English, Russian, Chinese, Korean, Basque, Georgian, etc.) and based on a system of rigorous definitions of the notions involved, which ensures a link with computational linguistics and Natural Language Processing

Author(s): Igor Mel'cuk
Series: Trends in Linguistics. Studies and Monographs [TiLSM], 347
Publisher: De Gruyter
Year: 2021

Language: English
Tags: Dependency Syntax; Typology; Surface-Syntactic Relations; Relative Clause

Acknowledgments
Contents
Symbols, abbreviations and writing conventions
Introduction
Part I: A Brief Overview of the Meaning-Text Model
1 Meaning-Text linguistic model
Part II: Surface-Syntactic Relations
2 A general inventory of surface-syntactic relations in the world’s languages
3 Syntactic subject: syntactic relations, once again
4 “Multiple subjects” and “multiple direct objects” in Korean
5 Genitive adnominal dependents in Russian: surface- syntactic relations in the N→NGEN phrase
Part III: Hard Nuts in Syntax – Cracked by Dependency Description
6 Relative clause: a typology
7 ESLI …, TO … ‘if …, then …’ Syntax of binary conjunctions in Russian
8 The East/Southeast Asian answer to the European passive
9 Pronominal idioms with a blasphemous noun in Russian and syntactically similar expressions
Part IV: Word Order – Linearizing Dependency Structures
10 Word order in Russian
11 Linear ordering of genitive adnominal dependents cosubordinated to a noun in Russian
References
Index of definitions
Index of notions and terms, supplied with a glossary
Index of languages
Index of semantic and lexical units