| عنوان : |
The Grammar Network: How Linguistic Structure Is Shaped by Language Use |
| نوع الوثيقة : |
نص مطبوع |
| مؤلفين : |
Holger Diessel |
| ناشر : |
Cambridge |
| تاريخ النشر : |
2022 |
| عدد الصفحات : |
289p. |
| Ill. : |
referance.index |
| ISBN/ISSN/EAN : |
978-1-108-71276-7 |
| ثمن : |
8600 |
| نقطة عامة : |
Gomparative and general Study and teaching Grammar, Comparative and general Syntax Grammar, Comparative and general Syntax Study and teaching Syntaxe |
| اللغة : |
إنكليزي (eng) لغة اصلية : إنكليزي (eng) |
| الكلمة المفتاح : |
400 - Langues 400 - Langues 400 - Langues 400 - Langues 400 - Language |
| تكشيف : |
420 اللغة الإنجليزية |
| خلاصة : |
Cognitive linguists and psychologists have often argued that language is best understood as an association network; however while the network view of language has had a significant impact on the study of morphology and lexical semantics, it is only recently that researchers have taken an explicit network approach to the study of syntax. This innovative study presents a dynamic network model of grammar in which all aspects of linguistic structure, including core concepts of syntax (e.g. phrase structure, word classes, grammatical relations), are analyzed in terms of associative connections between different types of linguistic elements. These associations are shaped by domain-general learning processes that are operative in language use and sensitive to frequency of occurrence. Drawing on research from usage-based linguistics and cognitive psychology, the book provides an overview of frequency effects in grammar and analyzes these effects within the framework of a dynamic network model. |
| نقطة للمضمون : |
. Introduction; Part I. Foundations: 2. Grammar as a network; 3. Cognitive processes and language use; Part II. Signs as Networks: 4. The taxonomic network; 5. Sequential relations; 6. Symbolic relations; Part III. Filler-Slot Relations: 7. Argument structure and linguistic productivity; 8. A dynamic network model of parts of speech; 9. Phrase structure; Part IV. Constructional Relations: 10. Construction families; 11. Encoding asymmetries of grammatical categories; 12. Conclusion. |
The Grammar Network: How Linguistic Structure Is Shaped by Language Use [نص مطبوع ] / Holger Diessel . - Cambridge, 2022 . - 289p. : referance.index. ISBN : 978-1-108-71276-7 : 8600 Gomparative and general Study and teaching Grammar, Comparative and general Syntax Grammar, Comparative and general Syntax Study and teaching Syntaxe اللغة : إنكليزي ( eng) لغة اصلية : إنكليزي ( eng)
| الكلمة المفتاح : |
400 - Langues 400 - Langues 400 - Langues 400 - Langues 400 - Language |
| تكشيف : |
420 اللغة الإنجليزية |
| خلاصة : |
Cognitive linguists and psychologists have often argued that language is best understood as an association network; however while the network view of language has had a significant impact on the study of morphology and lexical semantics, it is only recently that researchers have taken an explicit network approach to the study of syntax. This innovative study presents a dynamic network model of grammar in which all aspects of linguistic structure, including core concepts of syntax (e.g. phrase structure, word classes, grammatical relations), are analyzed in terms of associative connections between different types of linguistic elements. These associations are shaped by domain-general learning processes that are operative in language use and sensitive to frequency of occurrence. Drawing on research from usage-based linguistics and cognitive psychology, the book provides an overview of frequency effects in grammar and analyzes these effects within the framework of a dynamic network model. |
| نقطة للمضمون : |
. Introduction; Part I. Foundations: 2. Grammar as a network; 3. Cognitive processes and language use; Part II. Signs as Networks: 4. The taxonomic network; 5. Sequential relations; 6. Symbolic relations; Part III. Filler-Slot Relations: 7. Argument structure and linguistic productivity; 8. A dynamic network model of parts of speech; 9. Phrase structure; Part IV. Constructional Relations: 10. Construction families; 11. Encoding asymmetries of grammatical categories; 12. Conclusion. |
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