The intention of this book is to highlight the extent to which more rigorous measurement of grammatical effects can yield insights into grammatical structures and grammatical change. While there is some incidental discussion of methodologies and data processing techniques, the focus in this work is
Quantitative Approaches to Grammar and Grammatical Change: Perspectives from Germanic
โ Scribed by Sam Featherston (editor); Yannick Versley (editor)
- Publisher
- De Gruyter Mouton
- Year
- 2016
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 240
- Series
- Trends in Linguistics. Studies and Monographs [TiLSM]; 290
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The newly-emerging field of theoretically informed but simultaneously empirically based syntax is dynamic but little-represented in the literature. This volume addresses this need.
While there has previously been something of a gulf between theoretical linguists in the generative tradition and those linguists who work with quantitative data types, this gap is narrowing. In the light of the empirical revolution in the study of syntax, even people whose primary concern is grammatical theory take note of processing effects and attribute certain effects to them. Correspondingly, workers focusing on the surface evidence can relate more to the concepts of the theoreticians, because the two layers of explanation have been brought into contact. And these workers too must account for the data gathered by the theoreticians. An additional innovation is the generative analysis of historical data โ this is now seen as psycholinguistic theory-relevant data like any other.
These papers are thus a snapshot of some of the work currently being done in evidence-based grammar, using both experimental and historical data.
โฆ Table of Contents
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Complex center embedding in German โ The effect of sentence position
Constituent order in German multiple questions: Normal order and (apparent) anti-superiority effects
On the Limits of Non-Parallelism in ATB Movement: Experimental Evidence for Strict Syntactic Identity
Measure Phrase Constructions in English, German, and French: The (Non-)Occurrence of Antonyms and Effects of Evaluativity
Interpreting aggregated distances. The case of Old High German texts
Relative Object Order in High and Low German
Modeling language contact with diachronic crosslinguistic data
Diachronic Development of Null Subjects in German
What Determines โFreezingโ Effects in was-fรผr Split Constructions?
Index
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