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German language --- Resultative constructions. --- Syntax. --- -German language --- -Ashkenazic German language --- Hochdeutsch --- Judaeo-German language (German) --- Judendeutsch language --- Judeo-German language (German) --- Jüdisch-Deutsch language --- Jüdischdeutsch language --- Germanic languages --- Resultative constructions --- Syntax --- -Resultative constructions --- Ashkenazic German language --- German language - Resultative constructions. --- German language - Syntax. --- DEUTSCHE SPRACHE --- SYNTAX
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Gothic is unique among Germanic languages in regards to the ways it expresses non-agentive actions. It both retains a formal passive and has two periphrastic passives. In addition it presents an intransitive verb class with generally inchoative meaning. R. Moses Katz examines the semantics of these categories and shows how they provide a robust non-agentive paradigm in Gothic, including a functional, result-state perfect in the passive. In two parts, he examines first the inchoative verb and then the periphrastic passive. He proposes that the development of both types is underpinned by a single argument structure based on the resultative, a coordinated event type that links a transition with a resulting state.
Linguistics. --- Linguistic science --- Science of language --- Language and languages --- Gothic language --- Verb. --- Resultative constructions. --- Germanic languages
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Languages, Modern --- Languages, Modern --- Languages, Modern --- Languages, Modern --- Aspect. --- Resultative constructions. --- Syntax. --- Verb.
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Chinese language --- English language --- Grammar, Comparative and general --- Grammar, Comparative --- English. --- Grammar, Comparative --- Chinese. --- Resultative constructions.
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Spanish constructions of telic motion with manner verbs are somewhat problematic for the Talmian typology, while also posing a challenge for constructionist frameworks anchored in English grammar. In response to Talmy (2000), Aske (1989), Morimoto (2008), and Beavers et al. (2010) among others, I demonstrate in this article that this construction type tends to be acceptable whenever the lexical meaning of the verb implies an element of directed motion. Drawing on Goldberg (2006) and Pedersen (2009, 2013), I suggest that schematicity is a typological parameter, and, more specifically, that the
Romance languages --- Grammar --- Construction grammar --- Infinitival constructions --- Resultative constructions --- Grammar, Generative --- Grammar, Comparative --- Construction grammar. --- Infinitival constructions. --- Resultative constructions. --- Grammar, Generative. --- Grammar, Comparative. --- Romance languages - Infinitival constructions --- Romance languages - Resultative constructions --- Romance languages - Grammar, Generative --- Romance languages - Grammar, Comparative --- Neo-Latin languages --- Italic languages and dialects --- Grammar, Comparative and general
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This volume, originally published in Russian, combines data from a wide range of languages, meticulously analyzed, with a sophisticated theoretical apparatus capable of isolating the most important syntactic and semantic parameters and of drawing those generalizations that are most significant from a cross-linguistic perspective. Many ideas which are at best only hinted at in earlier literature - such as the precise relation among resultative, perfect, and stative, or correlations between resultative and passive voice - are here for the first time stated precisely and given a firm foundation b
Grammar --- Grammar, Comparative and general --Resultative constructions. --- Typology (Linguistics). --- Grammar, Comparative and general --- Typology (Linguistics) --- Languages & Literatures --- Philology & Linguistics --- Resultative constructions --- Language and languages --- Linguistic typology --- Linguistics --- Linguistic universals --- Philology --- Resultative constructions. --- Typology --- Classification --- 801.56 --- 801.56 Syntaxis. Semantiek --- Syntaxis. Semantiek
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Providing a unified solution within the frameworks of Construction Grammar and Frame Semantics, Hans Boas develops an account of resultative constructions in English by grouping them in two classes: conventionalized and non-conventionalized. The usage-based model used here proposes that each particular sense of a verb constitutes a conventionalized mini-construction, which is crucial information for the licensing of arguments. In contrast, verbs in non-conventionalized resultative constructions can acquire a novel meaning and thereby a new syntactic frame. English and German resultatives are compared to illustrate the distinct lexical polysemy networks of English and German verbs.
Grammar --- 802.0-56 --- Grammar, Comparative and general --- -Comparative grammar --- Grammar, Philosophical --- Grammar, Universal --- Language and languages --- Philosophical grammar --- Linguistics --- Philology --- Engels: syntaxis; semantiek --- Resultative constructions --- Grammar, Comparative --- Resultative constructions. --- -Engels: syntaxis; semantiek --- 802.0-56 Engels: syntaxis; semantiek --- -802.0-56 Engels: syntaxis; semantiek --- Comparative grammar --- Resultative (Linguistics) --- Resultant constructions --- Syntax --- Grammar, Comparative and general - Resultative constructions
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German language --- Romance languages --- Resultative constructions --- Grammar, Comparative --- Romance --- German --- Translating into Romance --- Syntax --- Resultative constructions. --- Romance. --- German. --- Translating into Romance. --- Syntax. --- German literature --- Verb phrase. --- Translations into Romance --- History and criticism. --- German language - Resultative constructions --- German language - Grammar, Comparative - Romance --- Romance languages - Grammar, Comparative - German --- German language - Translating into Romance --- German language - Syntax --- Allemand (langue) --- Langues romanes -- Grammaire comparée -- Allemand (langue) --- Allemand (langue) -- Traductions romanes --- Allemand (langue) -- Syntaxe --- Allemand (langue) -- Phrase verbale --- Grammaire générative --- Grammaire comparée --- Langues romanes
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Im ersten Teil der Arbeit wird die Kombinatorik von Verben mit verschiedenen Typen von prädikativen Komplementen im Rahmen einer zweistufigen Bedeutungsanalyse untersucht. Den Ausgangspunkt bildet die Annahme von Bierwisch (1988), daß lokale Präpositionalphrasen in Komplementpositionen eine Prädikatsvariable in der Semantischen Form der Verben sättigen. Vor diesem Hintergrund ist einerseits zu klären, wie Selektionsbeschränkungen über prädikative Komplemente formuliert werden können, und andererseits, wie die Lokalisierungsinformation der lokalen und direktionalen PPs an die der Fortbewegungsverben, Positionsverben und kausativen Positionsverben angebunden werden kann. Die in diesem Zusammenhang entwickelten Überlegungen werden im zweiten Teil auf Resultativkonstruktionen ausgedehnt. Um das unterschiedliche Verhalten der sogenannten unakkusativen und unergativen Verben in diesen Konstruktionen zu erklären, wird für die Einführung von zwei Typen semantischer Prädikate argumentiert, die durch die unterschiedliche Konzeptualisierung der von den Verben kodierten Eigenschaften motiviert ist. Die beiden Prädikatstypen werden dann dazu herangezogen, die zur Erklärung der Selektionsbeschränkungen bei prädikativen Komplementen aufgestellte Hypothese weiter auszubauen, daß in der Semantischen Form tiefer eingebettete Information die höhere Information spezifiziert. Auf dieser Basis werden allgemeine Beschränkungen zum Aufbau von semantischen Strukturen formuliert, aus denen sich unter anderem Beobachtungen zu thematischen Beschränkungen der Argumentpositionen ableiten lassen.
Causative (Linguistics) --- Prepositional phrases --- Resultative constructions --- Causal relations (Linguistics) --- Causative constructions --- -Prepositional phrases --- Grammar, Comparative and general --- -Grammar, Comparative and general --- Comparative grammar --- Grammar --- Grammar, Philosophical --- Grammar, Universal --- Language and languages --- Philosophical grammar --- Verb phrase --- Grammar, Comparative --- Lexicology. Semantics --- German language --- Predicate (Grammar) --- Resultative (Linguistics) --- Syntax --- Phrasal verb --- Predicate --- Verbals --- Resultant constructions --- Verb phrase. --- Prepositional phrases. --- Resultative constructions. --- Linguistics --- Philology --- Grammar, Comparative and general - - Prepositional phrases --- Grammar, Comparative and general - - Resultative constructions --- Grammar, Comparative and general - Verb phrase --- DEUTSCHE SPRACHE --- VERB --- SEMANTIK
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German language --- Construction grammar. --- Dependency grammar. --- Infinitival constructions. --- Direct object. --- Reflexives. --- Resultative constructions. --- Construction grammar --- Dependency grammar --- German language - Dependency grammar
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