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E-raamat: Grammar of Identity: Intensifiers and Reflexives in Germanic Languages [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

(Free University Berlin, Germany.)
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English self-forms and related words from other Germanic languages (e.g. Dutch zelf, Swedish själv, etc.) are used in two different functions: as intensifiers (e.g. The president himself made the decision) and as markers of reflexivity (John criticized himself). On the basis of a comparative syntactic and semantic analysis, this book addresses the question of why two such apparently different functions can be expressed by the same word. This question is answered by showing that both intensifying and reflexive self-forms can be analysed as expressing the concept of identity.

In the first part of The Grammar of Identity, the most central facts concerning the distribution of intensifiers in Germanic languages are surveyed and a detailed syntactic and semantic analysis is provided. It is shown that all instances of intensifiers can be analysed as expressions of an identity function. The second part of the book offers an analysis of reflexive self-forms which is based on recent theories of reflexivity, modifying these in some important respects. In particular, the distribution of reflexive self-forms is explained with reference to semantic properties of the sentential environment. In this way, it can be shown that reflexive self-forms like intensifiers can be analysed as expressions of an identity function. In addition to providing a thorough comparative description of the hitherto poorly described area of intensifiers in Germanic languages, this book offers an answer to a long standing question in descriptive and theoretical linguistics, namely why self-forms are used in two apparently different functions. By combining analytical methods from syntax, lexical semantics and sentence semantics the study moreover contributes to an understanding of the interaction between structure, meaning and context in a central area of lexico-grammar.
List of tables ix
List of figures x
Acknowledgements xi
Abbreviations and glosses xiii
1 Introduction 1(21)
1.1 SELF-forms in Germanic languages
1(2)
1.2 The meaning of SELF
3(3)
1.3 Three use types of intensifiers
6(2)
1.4 The structure of the book
8(1)
1.5 Previous analyses: an overview
9(13)
2 The distribution and morphology of head-adjacent SELF 22(14)
2.1 Syntax and inflection of head-adjacent SELF
22(8)
2.2 Combinatorial properties of head-adjacent SELF in English
30(6)
3 Head-adjacent intensifiers as expressions of an identity function 36(30)
3.1 Intensifiers versus free focus and topic constructions
36(4)
3.2 The interpretation of head-adjacent SELF
40(4)
3.3 Focus suppositions and contrast: identity vs. alterity
44(2)
3.4 Deriving the various readings of head-adjacent intensifiers
46(12)
3.5 Previous analyses of head-adjacent intensifiers
58(7)
3.6 Summary
65(1)
4 The syntax of head-distant intensifiers 66(33)
4.1 The distribution of head-distant SELF in German
66(12)
4.2 The distribution of head-distant SELF in Swedish
78(3)
4.3 The distribution of head-distant SELF in English
81(3)
4.4 Towards a derivational analysis of head-distant intensifiers
84(13)
4.5 Summary
97(2)
5 Combinatorial properties of head-distant intensifiers 99(18)
5.1 Exclusive head-distant SELF
99(13)
5.2 Inclusive head-distant SELF
112(4)
5.3 Summary
116(1)
6 The interpretation of head-distant intensifiers 117(37)
6.1 The interpretation of exclusive SELF
117(4)
6.2 From syntax to semantics
121(7)
6.3 The syntax and semantics of exclusive SELF
128(5)
6.4 The interpretation of inclusive SELF
133(4)
6.5 Deriving the function of inclusive SELF
137(4)
6.6 Previous analyses of head-distant intensifiers
141(12)
6.7 Summary
153(1)
7 Reflexivity and the identity function 154(43)
7.1 Typologies of reflexive markers
155(8)
7.2 The distribution of anaphors and pronominals
163(8)
7.3 SELF: identity predicate or identity function?
171(7)
7.4 Binding and conversational inferencing
178(1)
7.5 Reflexivity and Optimality Theory
179(2)
7.6 Kiparsky's reflexivity framework
181(5)
7.7 Reflexive-marking and the identity function
186(9)
7.8 Summary
195(2)
8 The grammar of reflexivity in Germanic languages 197(23)
8.1 Reflexivity in Scandinavian languages
198(5)
8.2 Reflexivity in Continental West Germanic and Afrikaans
203(4)
8.3 English self-forms as markers of reflexivity
207(11)
8.4 Summary
218(2)
Notes 220(11)
Sources 231(2)
References 233(13)
Indices 246(1)
Author index 246(4)
Language index 250(1)
Subject index 251


Free University Berlin, Germany.