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E-raamat: Syntax in the Making: The emergence of syntactic units in Finnish conversation

(University of Helsinki)
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Research on the interplay between language structure and language use has shown that grammar is shaped, maintained, and modified by language use. In this view, then, grammar is not seen as existing apart from language use, but rather as a set of recurrent, grammaticized patterns of discourse.
This book focuses on syntactic structuring in Finnish from the viewpoint of language use. The author sets out to study syntactic structures in their local contexts in order to discover the more global patterns and constraints on the use of these structures. The coding strategies point to the clause core as the locus of syntactic structuring: this is where syntactic relations emerge most clearly. It is shown that the key to understanding the coding of the core syntactic relations is the category of person. The clause core also shows strong intonational unity as it is most often presented in one intonation unit. Furthermore, analysis of spoken discourse shows the robustness of the category of noun phrase, both as a clausal constituent and as a free syntactic unit, the free NP.
List of tables and figures
xi
Preface xiii
Introduction
1(18)
Grammatical structures as cognitive schemas
4(5)
Data
9(2)
Coding and analysis of the data
11(4)
Noun Phrase type
11(1)
Semantic class
12(1)
Activation cost
12(1)
Discourse referentiality
13(1)
Grammatical roles
13(2)
Summary
15(1)
Representing the data
15(2)
Organization
17(2)
Dynamics of the clause
19(66)
What is a clause?
21(12)
Grammar-to-discourse models
22(3)
What are clauses needed for in discourse?
25(8)
Summary
33(1)
Coding strategies for syntactic functions
33(2)
Case marking: General principles
35(1)
Case marking in Finnish
36(28)
Nominative
40(6)
Accusative
46(5)
Partitive
51(5)
Interim summary: The interplay between the grammatical cases in the coding of syntactic roles
56(1)
The adessive and the other oblique cases
57(7)
Summary of case marking
64(1)
Agreement
64(12)
Sources of agreement markers
65(1)
Agreement: the system and how it is used
66(7)
Cross-referencing or indexing
73(2)
Summary: Agreement in the coding of grammatical relations
75(1)
Word order
76(6)
Word order and the preverbal position
76(3)
Word order and type of subject
79(2)
Summary on word order
81(1)
Summary: The clause revisited
82(3)
Grammaticization of the subject role
85(20)
Is there a unified subject role in Finnish?
85(4)
Subject and clause type
85(3)
The definition of subject from a discourse perspective
88(1)
What do subjects do in discourse?
89(8)
Information flow and the subject role
90(4)
Split patterning and the grammaticization of the subject role
94(3)
Subject and non-subject
97(6)
Existential constructions
97(4)
Subjects and open quantification
101(2)
Summary on the grammaticization of the subject
103(2)
Free NPs
105(28)
What is a free NP?
105(3)
Free NPs as syntactic units: A cross-linguistic perspective
108(5)
Case marking of free NPs
113(4)
Discourse functions of free NPs
117(14)
Identifying and classifying free NPs
117(6)
Theme and orientation
123(3)
Topic constructions
126(4)
Other
130(1)
Summary
131(2)
Intonation and syntactic structuring
133(18)
Intonation and constituent structure
135(5)
The emergence of constituent structure in discourse
135(1)
Intonation and constituency in Finnish
136(4)
Summary
140(1)
Intonational grouping and clausal organization
140(9)
Oblique NPs and clause structure
141(4)
Intonational grouping and the clause core
145(4)
Summary
149(2)
Conclusion
151(4)
References
155(12)
Appendix: Glossing and transcription conventions
167(4)
Glossing
167(1)
Nominal markings
167(1)
Verbal markings
168(1)
Other
168(1)
Transcription conventions
168(3)
Transitional continuity
168(1)
Accent and lengthening
168(1)
Quality
169(1)
Vocal noises
169(1)
Other
169(2)
Name index 171(4)
Subject index 175