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Overview"This text offers an analysis of the French clitic object pronouns ""lui"" and ""le"" in the radically functional Columbia school framework, constrasting this framework with sentence-based treatments of case selection. It suggests that features of the sentence such as subject and object relations, normally taken as pretheoretical categories of observation about language, are in fact part of a theory of language which does not withstand empricial testing. It shows that the correct categories are neither those of structural case nor those of lexical case, but rather, semantic ones. Traditionally, anomalies in the selection of dative and accusative case in French, such as case government, use of the dative for possession and disadvantaging, its uses in the faire-causative construction, and other puzzling distributional irregularities have been used to support the idea of an autonomous, non-functional central core of syntactic phenomena in language. The present analysis proposes semantic constants for ""lui"" and ""le"" which render all their occurences explicable in a straighforward way. The same functional perspective informs issues of cliticity and pronominalization as well. The solution offered here emerges from an innovative instrumental view of linguistic meaning, an acknowledgement that communicative output is determined only partially and indirectly by purely linguistic input, with extralinguistic knowlege and human inference bridging the gap. This approach entails identification of the pragmatic factors influencing case selection and a re-evaluation of thematic-role theory, and reveals the crucial impact of discourse on the structure as well as the functioning of grammar. One remarkable feature of the study is its data base. The hypothesis is buttressed by contextualized examples and large-scale counts drawn from modern French texts." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Alan Huffman (The City University of New York)Publisher: John Benjamins Publishing Co Imprint: John Benjamins Publishing Co Volume: 30 Weight: 0.620kg ISBN: 9789027230331ISBN 10: 9027230331 Pages: 379 Publication Date: 13 February 1997 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents1. Acknowledgements; 2. Introduction; 3. 1. The Problem of lui and le; 4. 1. Traditional Grammatical Categories; 5. 2. The Problem to Be Solved; 6. 3. Language-specific Grammatical Categories; 7. 4. The Goal of this Study; 8. 5. The Framework of the New Analysis; 9. 5.1. The Theoretical Background; 10. 5.2. Linguistic Meaning; 11. 5.3. Syntax? Semantics? Pragmatics?; 12. 5.4. Signals; 13. 5.5. Substance and Value; 14. 6. Columbia School Contrasted with Other Meaning-based Schools of Analysis; 15. 7. Grammatical Categories as Hypotheses; 16. 8. Lui versus the a Phrase; 17. 9. Precursors to this Analysis; 18. 2. The System of Degree of Control; 19. 1. Participants and Events; 20. 2. Degree of Control; 21. 3. The Status of the Highest Controller; 22. 4. The Satellite Relationship and Degree of Control; 23. 5. The Assigning of Roles via Degree of Control; 24. 6. Where the Roles Come From; 25. 7. Meaning Not in the Sentence; 26. 8. Precision as a Factor in Choice of Meaning; 27. 9. Strategies of Exploitation; 28. 10. A Look Ahead; 29. 11. Participants in the Event vs. Non-participants; 30. 11.1. Participants in Events vs. Circumstances of Events; 31. 11.2. Participants vs. Prepositional Phrases; 32. 11.3. Participants vs. Possessive Adjectives; 33. 3. Semantic Substance: Exploitations of Degree of Control; 34. 1. Types of Involvement Associated with the Mid Controller; 35. 1.1. Interactor; 36. 1.2. Expediter/Enabler; 37. 1.3. Causer; 38. 1.4. Motivator; 39. 2. Lui- with Predicate Nouns and Adjectives; 40. 3. Illusory Categories of Fractional Meaning: Dative of Possession and Dative of the Disadvantaged ; 41. 3.1. The Dative of Possession ; 42. 3.2. Beneficiary and Maleficiary ; 43. 4. Linguistic Value: Lui versus Le; 44. 1. Substance and Value in Linguistic Analysis; 45. 2. Validating the Opposition between lui- and le-; 46. 3. The Superagent: A Striking Manifestation of Value; 47. 3.1. Harmer's Examples with faire; 48. 3.2. Other Instances of the Superagent; 49. 4. Three- versus Two-participant Messages; 50. 5. Animacy Skewing in Two-participant Messages; 51. 6. Low Level of Activity with le-; 52. 7. Wider Exploitation of the Control Opposition in Two-Participant Messages; 53. 8. Occurrences of lui- and le- with Semantically-Defined Verb Classes; 54. 9. The Network of Oppositions: Verbs of Commanding ; 55. 5. Networks of Oppositions; 56. 1. The System of Participants; 57. 1.1. The Grammatical Interlock; 58. 1.2. Focus; 59. 1.3. The Focus-Control Interlock; 60. 1.4. The First and Second Persons; 61. 1.5. Deixis; 62. 1.6. Communicative Motivation for Paradigmatic Structure; 63. 2. The High Controller in Two-Participant Messages; 64. 3. Interaction of the High- and Non-High Controller Strategies; 65. 4. Case Study: Verbs of Asking ; 66. 5. The Pseudo-Phenomenon of Government ; 67. Appendix A: Verbs Included in Counts of Tables 5.3 and 5.4; 68. Appendix B: Additional Charts Showing Control Level in Relation to Government ; 69. 6. The Theory of the Sentence and the Traditional Canon; 70. 1. Lui- and le- as a Linguistic Problem; 71. 2. The Theory of the Sentence; 72. 2.1. Deductively Motivated Categories; 73. 2.2. The Tripartite Relationship; 74. 2.3. Testing the Theory of the Sentence: The Appendix; 75. 3. Traditional Grammar and Generative Grammar; 76. 4. Direct and Indirect Object in the Grammar of French; 77. 5. Notional or Formal Categories?; 78. 6. A Morpho-syntactic Approach: Blinkenberg; 79. 7. The Notion of Transitivity ; 80. 8. Transitivity as an Explanatory Construct; 81. 9. The Traditional Canon of Categories; 82. 10. A Functionalist View: Hopper & Thompson; 83. 11. Linguistic Resources vs. Linguistic Products; 84. 7. A New Perspective on the Notions Pronominalization and Cliticity ; 85. 1. The Pronoun as a Grammatical Category; 86. 1.1. The Problem of Pronominalization; 87. 1.2. Taking the Morphemes Seriously; 88. 1.3. The Term Dative and the Problem of the Dative; 89. 2. A Columbia-school approach to a phrases; 90. 2.1. Degree of Control with Nouns; 91. 2.2. Choice of Preposition; 92. 2.3. The Contribution of a; 93. 2.4. From Circumstance to Control; 94. 2.5. The Precision Factor; 95. 2.6. A vs. par: An Exploitation of Relative Precision; 96. 2.7. Summary; 97. 3. The Function of Cliticity; 98. 3.1. Ordering among the Clitics; 99. 3.2. Combinatory Skewings among Clitics; 100. 3.3. Word Order in Imperative Messages; 101. 8. The Categories of Grammar; 102. 1. Grammar as Explanation; 103. 2. Language, Thought, and Communication; 104. 3. Functionalist Schools of Grammar; 105. 4. The Nature and Role of Linguistic Theory; 106. 5. The Acquisition and Use of Language; 107. 6. Observations and Hypotheses in Linguistics; 108. 7. The Human Factor in Language; 109. Notes; 110. Bibliography; 111. Abbreviations; 112. Abbreviations of Texts Cited; 113. IndexReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |