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Non-Verbal Predication: Copular sentences at the syntax-semantics interface (Oxford Studies in Theoretical Linguistics)

Non-Verbal Predication: Copular sentences at the syntax-semantics interface (Oxford Studies in Theoretical Linguistics)

Non-Verbal Predication: Copular sentences at the syntax-semantics interface
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Non-Verbal Predication: Copular sentences at the syntax-semantics interface (Oxford Studies in Theoretical Linguistics) Hardback - 2013

by Roy, Isabelle

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Reader reviews for Non-Verbal Predication: Copular sentences at the syntax-semantics interface (Oxford Studies in Theoretical Linguistics)

From the publisher

This book considers the syntax and semantics of non-verbal predicates (i.e., nominal, adjectival and prepositional predicates) in copular sentences. Isabelle Roy explores how a single structure for predication can account for the different interpretations of non-verbal predicates. The book departs from earlier studies by arguing in favor of a ternary distinction between defining / characterizing / situation-descriptive predicates rather than the more common stage-level/individual distinction. The distinction is based on two semantic criteria, namely maximality (i.e., whether the predicate describes an eventuality that has spatio-temporal properties or not) and density (i.e. whether the spatio-temporal properties are perceived as atomic or not). The author argues in favor of a strong correlation between the semantics properties of predicates and their internal syntactic structure. Her analysis accounts for seemingly unrelated cross-linguistic data: the indefinite article in French, the distribution of the two copulas 'ser'/'estar' in Spanish, and case marking on Russian predicates.

About the author

Isabelle Roy is an Associate Professor at the Unversity of Paris 8. She received her PhD from the University of Southern California in 2006.
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