Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
The canonical approach in typology*
-
Greville G. Corbett
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction vii
- What are we typologists doing? 1
- The canonical approach in typology* 25
- What is an empirical theory of linguistic meaning a theory of? 51
- Language processes, theory and description of language change, and building on the past 81
- On the part played by human conscious choice in language structure and language evolution 105
- The challenge of polygrammaticalization for linguistic theory 119
- On discourse frequency, grammar, and grammaticalization 143
- On the assumption of the sentence as the basic unit of syntactic structure 169
- Adpositions as a non-universal category 185
- Understanding antigemination 203
- What it means to be rare 235
- The principle of Functional Transparency in language structure and in language evolution 259
- The importance of discourse analysis for linguistic theory 285
- Compounding theories and linguistic diversity 319
- Inalienability and possessum individuation* 339
- Resultativeness in English 363
- Encoding speaker perspective 379
- Distinguishing between referential and grammatical function in morphological typology 399
- Index 423
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction vii
- What are we typologists doing? 1
- The canonical approach in typology* 25
- What is an empirical theory of linguistic meaning a theory of? 51
- Language processes, theory and description of language change, and building on the past 81
- On the part played by human conscious choice in language structure and language evolution 105
- The challenge of polygrammaticalization for linguistic theory 119
- On discourse frequency, grammar, and grammaticalization 143
- On the assumption of the sentence as the basic unit of syntactic structure 169
- Adpositions as a non-universal category 185
- Understanding antigemination 203
- What it means to be rare 235
- The principle of Functional Transparency in language structure and in language evolution 259
- The importance of discourse analysis for linguistic theory 285
- Compounding theories and linguistic diversity 319
- Inalienability and possessum individuation* 339
- Resultativeness in English 363
- Encoding speaker perspective 379
- Distinguishing between referential and grammatical function in morphological typology 399
- Index 423