A constructional account of subject extraposition
Type de document :
Compte-rendu et recension critique d'ouvrage
DOI :
Titre :
Testing the Principle of No Synonymy across levels of abstraction
A constructional account of subject extraposition
A constructional account of subject extraposition
Auteur(s) :
Laporte, Samantha [Auteur]
Université de Lille
Savoirs, Textes, Langage (STL) - UMR 8163 [STL]
Larsson, Tove [Auteur]
Northern Arizona University [Flagstaff]
Goulart, Larissa [Auteur]
Northern Arizona University [Flagstaff]
Université de Lille
Savoirs, Textes, Langage (STL) - UMR 8163 [STL]
Larsson, Tove [Auteur]
Northern Arizona University [Flagstaff]
Goulart, Larissa [Auteur]
Northern Arizona University [Flagstaff]
Titre de la revue :
Constructions and Frames
Pagination :
230-262
Éditeur :
John Benjamins
Date de publication :
2021
ISSN :
1876-1933
Discipline(s) HAL :
Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Linguistique
Résumé en anglais : [en]
This corpus-based study tests the Principle of No Synonymy across levels of abstraction by examining the syntactic realizations of subject extraposition (e.g., it is important to, it seems that ), and by investigating at ...
Lire la suite >This corpus-based study tests the Principle of No Synonymy across levels of abstraction by examining the syntactic realizations of subject extraposition (e.g., it is important to, it seems that ), and by investigating at which level(s) of formal description a difference in form also entails a difference in function. The results show that distinct pairs of form and function, i.e. constructions, can be found at different levels of abstraction, but that these constructions also subsume formal realization patterns that do not encode a difference in function. This suggests that the Principle of No Synonymy largely breaks down at low levels of formal description. The study also offers a constructional account of subject extraposition by identifying a number of subject extraposition constructions, thereby showing that this is a syntactic phenomenon that is best analyzed as a family of constructions.Lire moins >
Lire la suite >This corpus-based study tests the Principle of No Synonymy across levels of abstraction by examining the syntactic realizations of subject extraposition (e.g., it is important to, it seems that ), and by investigating at which level(s) of formal description a difference in form also entails a difference in function. The results show that distinct pairs of form and function, i.e. constructions, can be found at different levels of abstraction, but that these constructions also subsume formal realization patterns that do not encode a difference in function. This suggests that the Principle of No Synonymy largely breaks down at low levels of formal description. The study also offers a constructional account of subject extraposition by identifying a number of subject extraposition constructions, thereby showing that this is a syntactic phenomenon that is best analyzed as a family of constructions.Lire moins >
Langue :
Anglais
Vulgarisation :
Non
Collections :
Source :