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E-raamat: Lexical Polycategoriality: Cross-linguistic, cross-theoretical and language acquisition approaches

Edited by (CNRS & Université Paris Nanterre), Edited by (Université Paris Descartes & CNRS)
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This book presents a collection of chapters on the nature, flexibility and acquisition of lexical categories. These long-debated issues are looked at anew by exploring the hypothesis of lexical polycategoriality –according to which lexical forms are not fully, or univocally, specified for lexical category– in a wide number of unrelated languages, and within different theoretical and methodological perspectives. Twenty languages are thoroughly analyzed. Apart from French, Arabic and Hebrew, the volume includes mostly understudied languages, spoken in New Guinea, Australia, New Caledonia, Amazonia, Meso- and North America. Resulting from a long-standing collaboration between leading international experts, this book brings under one cover new data analyses and results on word categories from the linguistic and acquisitional point of view. It will be of the utmost interest to researchers, teachers and graduate students in different fields of linguistics (morpho-syntax, semantics, typology), language acquisition, as well as psycholinguistics, cognition and anthropology.
Acknowledgments ix
List of contributors
xi
Lexical Polycategoriality -- Cross-linguistic, cross-theoretical and language acquisition approaches. An introduction 1(34)
Valentina Vapnarsky
Edy Veneziano
Part I Polycategoriality: The where and how of flexibility?
The flexibility of the noun/verb distinction in the lexicon of Mandinka
35(24)
Denis Creissels
Derivationally based homophony in French
59(20)
Francoise Kerleroux
Categorial flexibility as an emergent phenomenon: A comparison of Arabic, Wolof, and French
79(22)
Alain Kihm
Part II Polycategoriality across Amerindian languages: From words to roots
Polycategoriality and hybridity across Mayan languages: Action nouns and ergative splits
101(54)
Ximena Lois
Valentina Vapnarsky
Cedric Becquey
Aurore Monod Becquelin
Polycategoriality and zero derivation: Insights from Central Alaskan Yup'ik Eskimo
155(20)
Marianne Mithun
What determines constraints on the relationships between roots and lexical categories? Evidence from Choctaw and Cherokee
175(32)
Marcia Haag
Part III Polycategoriality across Austronesian and Australian languages: Function and typology
Lexical and syntactic categories in Nelemwa (New Caledonia) and some other Austronesian languages: Fluid vs. rigid categoriality
207(36)
Isabelle Bril
Two classes of verbs in Northern Australian languages: Implications for the typology of polycategoriality
243(32)
Eva Schultze-Berndt
Part IV Linguistic analysis in the light of acquisition data
The ontology of roots and the emergence of nouns and verbs in Kuikuro: Adult speech and children's acquisition
275(32)
Bruna Franchetto
Mara Santos
Flexibles and polyvalence in Ku Waru: A developmental perspective
307(36)
Francesca Merlan
Alan Rumsey
Word class distinctiveness versus polycategoriality in Modern Hebrew: Typological and psycholinguistic perspectives
343(38)
Ruth A. Berman
Part V Lexical categories and polycategoriality in acquisition
Noun and Verb categories in acquisition: Evidence from fillers and inflectional morphology in French-acquiring children
381(32)
Edy Veneziano
Semantic discrimination of Noun/Verb categories in French children aged 1;6 to 2;11
413(30)
Christophe Parisse
Caroline Rossi
The acquisition of action nouns in Yucatec Maya
443(24)
Barbara Pfeiler
Author Index 467(6)
Language Index 473(2)
Subject Index 475