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E-book: The Typology of Parts of Speech Systems: The Markedness of Adjectives

(Ochsner Clinic, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA)
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This book presents rigorous and criterial definitions of the major parts of speech - noun, verb, and adjective - that account both for their syntactic behaviour and for their observed typological variation. Based on an examination of languages from five different groups - Salishan, Cora, Quechua, Totonac, and Hausa - this book argues that parts of speech must be defined by combining the criteria of syntactic markedness, which characterizes lexical classes in terms of unmarked syntactic roles, and semantic prototypicality, which delimits their prototypical meanings. Adjectives are shown to be the marked (and, hence, most variable) class because of their inherent non-iconicity at the semantics/syntax interface. The four-member typology of parts of speech systems (languages with three open classes, those that group adjectives with verbs, those that group adjectives with nouns, and those that conflate all three) current in the literature is easily generated by free recombination of these two criterial features. Closer examination of the data, however, casts doubt on the existence of one of the four possible language-types, the noun-adjective conflating inventory, which is accounted here for by replacing free recombination of semantic and syntactic features with an algorithm for the subdivision of the lexicon that gives primacy to semantics over syntax.
Acknowledgements vii
Abbreviations ix
Note on phonological transcriptions xi
Introduction
3(8)
Definitions of lexical classes
11(64)
Semantic characterizations
12(2)
Morphological diagnostics
14(4)
Syntactic distribution
18(2)
Extended roles and syntactic markedness
20(21)
Criteria for markedness
21(3)
WFM and markedness
24(4)
Rigid versus flexible languages
28(3)
Measures of contextual markedness: De- and rectegorization
31(5)
Markedness and prototypical mappings
36(5)
The semantics of parts of speech
41(30)
Prototypicality and peripherality in lexical classification
42(3)
Semantic NAMEs
45(3)
Semantic predictates
48(4)
Property concepts
52(2)
Human characteristics
54(9)
Why semantic NAMEs are not linguistic predicates
63(2)
Non-prototypical semantic predicates and implicit arguments
65(6)
Syntactic markedness and semantic prototypes
71(4)
Semantics, syntax, and the lexicon
75(20)
Some basic terminology
76(4)
Lexicalization and syntactic structure
80(3)
Adjectives, markedness, and iconicity
83(2)
Relations between semantic NAMEs: Attribution and possession
85(6)
Minor lexical classes
91(4)
Types of lexical inventory
95(94)
Verb-Adjective conflating inventories
101(39)
Noun, verb, and adjective in Salishan
103(1)
Nominal predicates and nominal actants
104(9)
Verbs as actants
113(9)
Verbs as unmarked modifiers
122(3)
Modification in Bella Coola
125(6)
Cora
131(1)
Modification and relative clauses in Cora
132(2)
Nouns and modification in Cora
134(3)
Flexibility and rigidity as syntactic parameters
137(3)
Noun-Adjective conflating inventories
140(49)
Quechua
142(7)
Upper Necaxa Totonac
149(1)
Property concepts in Upper Necaxa
150(3)
Adjectives and nouns as syntactic predicates
153(4)
Adjectives as actants
157(5)
Nouns as modifiers
162(4)
Secondary diagnostics: Quantification and pluralization
166(6)
Hausa
172(13)
The N[ AV] inventory reconsidered
185(4)
Conclusions
189(16)
References 205(8)
Index 213


Beck, David