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Acknowledgements | ||
Pt. I | The Relationship between Form and Meaning | [s.n.] |
1 | The Semantics of Syntax: Defining the Object of Inquiry | 3 |
2 | Selective Semantics and Syntactic Correspondence | 72 |
Pt. II | Selective Semantics and the Lexicon | 117 |
3 | A Case Study of Six French Verbs | 119 |
Pt. III | Selective Semantics and Syntax | 255 |
4 | Psych Verbs | 259 |
5 | Verb Movement | 387 |
Afterword | 449 | |
Notes | 451 | |
References | 503 |
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Add The Semantics of Syntax : A Minimalist Approach to Grammar, During the last thirty years, most linguists and philosophers have assumed that meaning can be represented symbolically and that the mental processing of language involves the manipulation of symbols. Scholars have assembled strong evidence that there mus, The Semantics of Syntax : A Minimalist Approach to Grammar to your collection on WonderClub |