Noun incorporation: A Chinese case?*

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چکیده

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منابع مشابه

Noun Incorporation in Frisian

Noun incorporation in Frisian (Dyk 1997) is unusual because it shows certain restrictions that are not seen in other languages with noun incorporation, such as Mohawk and Chukchi. In addition, while others argue that noun incorporation is indeed possible in Germanic (see Booij 2009 for Dutch, Barrie and Spreng 2009 for German), Frisian is unusual even with respect to Germanic in allowing noun i...

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Tongan Noun Incorporation: Words and Phrases

Analyses of Tongan noun incorporation in the general typological surveys of noun incorporation (Mithun 1984, Gerdts 1998) have argued that this Tongan construction involves syntactic juxtaposition of a verb and a single noun. Given data as such in (1), this would seem to be correct, since ordinary transitive sentences like (1a) contrast with sentences with incorporation, like (1b), in that the ...

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Noun Incorporation and Non-canonical Objects

Noun incorporation in Northern Iroquoian and non-canonical objects in Chinese share many traits. We argue that this is not an accident, but that it is due to Case and theta licensing principles. We show that this has larger implications for the theory of Case and argument licensing in general. We assume, without discussion, that NI is syntactic(see also Barrie). The syntactic nature of NI is un...

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Noun incorporation and the Mohawk lexicon

Mohawk, like many North American languages, seems to do in its morphology what more familiar languages do in their syntax. When faced with such a language, the linguist is forced to reconsider some basic notions. Do we ignore the apparent parallels between syntactic and morphological processes and continue to treat them diierently, or do we push syntax down below the word level? What is the div...

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ژورنال

عنوان ژورنال: <i>WORD</i>

سال: 1992

ISSN: 0043-7956,2373-5112

DOI: 10.1080/00437956.1992.12098301