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Polish Psychological Verbs at the Lexicon-Syntax Interface in Cross-linguistic Perspective New edition [Pehme köide]

Teised raamatud teemal:
Teised raamatud teemal:
This book is a comparative study of Polish psychological verbs. The analysis concentrates on the lexicon-syntax interface of psych verbs, and constitutes an argument in favour of its strong dependence on event structure. The aim of this study is to show that the class of Polish psych verbs, as in many other languages, is not uniform. The analysed subclasses are differentiated on the basis of their causation and stativity. The marriage of those semantic traits and their structural representation is possible only if it is performed via event structure configuration, a layer which appears to underlie the conceptualisation of events.

Contents: Psych verbs - Subject Experiencer Verbs - Object Experiencer Verbs - Stative Causation - Complex/Simple Event Structure Representation - Argument Licensing.

The Author: Adam Bialy graduated from the Institute of English Studies at the University of Wroclaw in 1998. In 2004 the author was awarded a doctoral degree in linguistics at the Philological Department of the University of Wroclaw. His research interests include lexicon-syntax interface, argument licensing, event structure and language typology.
Acknowledgements 9(2)
Introduction 11(4)
Introduction to the theory of argument expression
15(46)
The relation between semantics and syntax
15(16)
Predicate semantics
16(1)
Semantic Role Lists
16(2)
Lexical Conceptual Structure
18(1)
Argument Structure
19(1)
From Lexical Semantic to Lexical Syntactic Representation
20(1)
Predicate Decomposition
21(1)
Lexical semantics--syntax interface
22(1)
Semantic Feature systems
23(3)
Linking rules
26(5)
Psych verbs in modern linguistic theory
31(5)
Belletti and Rizzi's (1988) account of psych-verbs
32(2)
Pesetsky's (1995) account of psych-verbs
34(2)
Developments of the movement theory
36(6)
Pylkkanen (1998)
37(5)
Developments of the non-movement theory
42(7)
Arad (1998, 1999)
42(4)
Backward Binding
46(3)
Event structure and psych verbs
49(9)
Pustejovsky's (1991) event structure
49(3)
Simple and Complex Events
52(5)
Event Structure and Constructionalism
57(1)
Conclusions
58(3)
The Syntax of psych verbs
61(44)
SubjExp verbs
62(7)
Reflexivization of SubjExp verbs
63(4)
Passivization of SubjExp verbs
67(2)
ObjExp verbs
69(27)
ObjExp verbs and lexical reduction
70(1)
The Causative Alternation in Polish
71(1)
Agentive modification
72(1)
The Instrumental Case
73(4)
Passivization of ObjExp verbs
77(2)
Passives of Polish psych verbs
79(1)
Causative verbs and passivization
80(3)
Belletti and Rizzi's (1988) analysis of ObjExp predicates
83(1)
Theme a-movement in the domain of ObjExp verbs
83(1)
The Genitive of Negation
83(1)
The Genitive of Negation with Polish psych verbs
84(1)
Nominalization of ObjExp verbs
85(4)
Passivization and Nominalization of Psych verbs
89(2)
The Thematic nature of the Subject argument of ObjExp verbs
91(2)
The T/SM restriction
93(3)
Non-accusative ObjExp verbs
96(7)
Non-accusative ObjExp verbs and Reduction
97(2)
Non-accusative ObjExp verbs and Passivization
99(1)
The arity of Non-accusative ObjExp verbs
100(3)
Conclusion
103(2)
The Semantics of psych-verbs
105(38)
The Philosophy and Psychology of Emotion
106(4)
The semantics of SubjExp verbs
110(8)
The aspectuality of SubjExp verbs
110(1)
SubjExp verbs and temporal adverbials
111(1)
The Progressive
112(1)
Non-habitual interpretation of SubjExp verbs
113(3)
SubjExp verbs and Individual-level predicates
116(2)
The Semantics of ObjExp verbs
118(18)
Causativity of ObjExp verbs
119(1)
Types of ObjExp verbs
119(1)
The Agentive reading
120(1)
The Eventive reading
121(1)
The Stative reading
122(1)
Perfective/Imperfective entailments of ObjExp verbs
123(3)
Aspectual classification of ObjExp verbs
126(1)
ObjExp verbs and temporal adverbials
127(1)
The Imperative with ObjExp verbs
127(1)
Habitual interpretation and other tests
128(3)
ObjExp verbs and Stage-level predicates
131(5)
The Semantics of non-accusative ObjExp verbs
136(5)
Stativity of non-accusative ObjExp verbs
136(3)
The interpretations of non-accusative ObjExp verbs
139(2)
Conclusion
141(2)
Integrating the syntax and the semantics of psych verbs
143(22)
Event types of psych verbs
144(9)
Event types
145(1)
Event Composition
146(7)
Simple and complex events
153(6)
External and internal causation
159(3)
Conclusion
162(3)
Conclusions 165(2)
References 167