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E-raamat: Asymmetric Events

Edited by (University of Lodz)
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The book introduces the concept of asymmetric events, an important concept in language and cognition, which, for the first time in linguistic literature, is identified in a more systematic way and analyzed in a number of different languages, including typologically or genetically unrelated ones. Asymmetric events are two or more events of unequal status in an utterance and papers in the volume present ways in which a linguistic description of main events in a sentence is different (morphologically, syntactically, discursively) from a description of backgrounded events. The prototypical asymmetries involving perception, cognition, and language are identified in subordination, nominalization and modification of various kinds but they extend to coordinate structures, serial verbs, spatial language and viewing arrangement, as well as part - whole relations. The perspective is broadly cognitive and functional, the authors use different though complementing methodologies, some include corpus data, and the asymmetries are shown to have a variety of stylistic and ideological implications.An in-depth analysis of manifold asymmetries in structure and function of diverse languages makes this volume of interest to linguists of different persuasion, philosophers, cognitive researchers, discourse analysts and students of language and cognition.

Arvustused

The book is an important contribution in the recent trend of cross-linguistically and typologically-driven syntactic research and presents a cognitive-functional perspective on an abstract structural domain, subordination, that has generally been the target of more formally-driven, language-specific inquiry. The articles in the book, including work by some of the leading scholars in the field, argue convincingly for the cognitive underpinnings of some of the most abstract morphosyntactic phenomena in natural language, and shows how taking this approach provides insights not only into the structure of a wide range of grammatical systems, but also into the way human beings conceptualize events and encode these conceptualizations for the purposes of communication. -- David Beck, University of Alberta, Canada

Introduction vii
Part
1. Event chains and complex events
Asymmetry in English multi-verb sequences: A corpus-based approach
3(22)
John Newman
Sally Rice
Asymmetries for locating events with Cora spatial language
25(28)
Eugene H. Casad
Spanish (de)queismo: Part/whole alternation and viewing arrangement
53(34)
Nicole Delbecque
What does coordination look like in a head-final language?
87(16)
Nayoung Kwon
Maria Polinsky
Verb seralization as a means of expressing complex events in Thai
103(18)
Kingkarn Thepkanjana
Notional asymmetry in syntactic symmetry: Connective and accessibilty marker interactions
121(16)
Katsunobu Izutsu
Mitsuko Narita Izutsu
Part
2. Subordination, nominalization, modification
Subordination in cognitive grammar
137(14)
Ronald W.Langacker
Asymmetric events, subordination, and grammatical categories
151(22)
Sonia Cristofaro
Asymmetry reversal
173(22)
Frantisek Lichtenberk
Transparency vs. economy: How does Adioukroun resolve the conflict?
195(14)
Kaoru Horie
Prashant Pardeshi
Guy Kaul
Relating participants across asymmetric events: Conceptual constraints on obligatory control
209(18)
Klaus-Uwe Panther
The Portuguese inflected infinitive and its conceptual basis
227(18)
Augusto Soares da Silva
The periphrastic realization of participants in nominalizations: Semantic and discourse constraints
245(16)
Liesbet Heyvaert
Asymmetries in participial modification
261(22)
Barbara Lewandowska-Tomaszczyk
Author index 283(2)
Subject index 285