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Les unités linguistiques ayant pour fonction de signifier une relation entre d'autres unités de discours, suscitent un intérêt toujours renouvelé. Ces « mots-outils » obligent le linguiste à interroger les rapports entre syntaxe et sémantique, logique et linguistique, système et discours, signe et implicite.
Grammar, Comparative and general --- Prepositions. --- Conjunctions. --- Connectives.
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Les unités linguistiques ayant pour fonction (paradoxale) de signifier une relation entre d'autres unités de discours, suscitent, depuis l?Antiquité, un intérêt toujours renouvelé. Défi pour le grammairien, dont ils subvertissent les ± parties du discours ?, ces ± mots-outils ?, que l'on peut prendre pour des "mots vides", obligent le linguiste à interroger les rapports entre syntaxe et sémantique, logique et linguistique, système et discours, signe et implicite.00Les onze études réunies dans ce livre s?attachent à décrire les processus de fonctionnement de morphèmes appartenant à des langues diverses (allemand, français, italien, latin, vietnamien), qui marquent une relation de liaison ou d'intégration. Ces études de cas détaillées, menées selon différents cadres théoriques (typologie, cognitivisme, psycho-mécanique, grammaire fractale, linguistique de l'énonciation, argumentation dans la langue, linguistique textuelle), du point de vue synchronique ou diachronique, mettent en valeur le caractère premier de la variation dans les systèmes linguistiques.00Un chapitre introductif pose les repères terminologiques, historiques et théoriques pour l'étude de catégories de signes linguistiques ? prépositions, conjonctions, connecteurs ?, marqués par la transcatégorialité et la polyfonctionalité.
Grammar, Comparative and general --- Connectives (Linguistics) --- Sentence connectors --- Conjunctions (Linguistics) --- Prepositions --- Prepositions. --- Conjunctions. --- Connectives. --- Function words --- Syntax --- Connectives --- Auxiliaries --- Prepositional phrases --- Conjunctions --- Grammaire comparée. --- E-books --- Grammar --- Historical linguistics --- Comparative linguistics --- Linguistics --- Philology --- Grammar, Comparative and general - Prepositions --- Grammar, Comparative and general - Conjunctions --- Grammar, Comparative and general - Connectives --- Grammaire comparée.
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In this book, Barry Schein argues that "and" is always the sentential logical connective with the same, one, meaning. "And" always means "&," across the varied constructions in which it is tokened in natural language. Schein examines the constructions that challenge his thesis, and shows that the objections disappear when these constructions are translated into Eventish, a neo-Davidsonian event semantics, and, enlarged with Cinerama Semantics, a vocabulary for spatial orientation and navigation. Besides rescuing "and" from ambiguity, Eventish and Cinerama Semantics solve general puzzles of grammar and meaning unrelated to conjunction, revealing the book's central thesis in the process: aspects of meaning mistakenly attributed to "and" are discovered to reflect neighboring structures previously unseen and unacknowledged. 00Schein argues that Eventish and Cinerama Semantics offer a fundamental revision to clause structure and what aspects of meaning are represented therein. Eventish is distinguished by four features: supermonadicity, which enlarges verbal decomposition so that every argument relates to its own event; descriptive event anaphora, which replaces simple event variables with silent descriptive pronouns; adverbialization, which interposes adverbials derived from the descriptive content of every DP; and AdrPs, which replace all NPs with Address Phrases that locate what nominals denote within scenes or frames of reference. 0.
And (The English word) --- English language --- Grammar, Comparative and general --- Generative grammar --- Grammar, Generative --- Grammar, Transformational --- Grammar, Transformational generative --- Transformational generative grammar --- Transformational grammar --- Language and languages --- Sentences (Grammar) --- Coordination (Linguistics) --- Conjunctions (Linguistics) --- Conjunctions --- Coordinate constructions --- Sentences --- Derivation --- Psycholinguistics --- Parallelism (Linguistics) --- Etymology --- Syntax --- Connectives --- Generative grammar. --- Conjunctions. --- Coordinate constructions. --- Sentences. --- LINGUISTICS & LANGUAGE/General --- Linguistics --- Philology --- Germanic languages
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