This article investigates prototypically attributive versus predicative adjectives in English in terms of the phonological properties that have been associated especially with nouns versus verbs in a substantial body of psycholinguistic research (e.g. Kelly 1992) - often ignored in theoretical linguistic work on word classes. Inspired by Berg's (2000, 2009) 'cross-level harmony constraint', the hypothesis I test is that prototypically attributive adjectives not only align more with nouns than with verbs syntactically, semantically and pragmatically, but also phonologically - and likewise for prototypically predicative adjectives and verbs. I analyse the phonological structure of frequent adjectives from the Corpus of Contemporary American E...
I argue there are four classes of adjectives relevant to syntactic ordering: predicative/intersectiv...
[Abstract] Our main purpose in this paper is to look into the place of adjectives in a particular pe...
This paper examines the syntactic distribution of degree modifiers in both spoken and written Englis...
This paper focuses on a class of English adjectives that are subject to important restrictions on th...
1 A certain class of English adjectives known as a-adjectives resists appearing attributively as pre...
The book is concerned with a hitherto underresearched grammaticalization process: the development fr...
This study is concerned with the examination of word-order universals and the attempt to explain the...
[EN] This article explores a type of co-occurrence pattern which cannot be adequately described by e...
Children master adjectives at a later stage in development compared to other word classes (Ravid & L...
This thesis explores the analysis of English adjectives and adjectivals, in particular those which ...
I investigate the use of two English intensifiers: quite and rather. When quite and rather modify at...
grantor: University of TorontoMost current linguistic theories--whose main proponents are ...
Structuralists and generativists define word classes distributionally (Palmer 1971, Baker 2003, Aart...
I investigate the use of two English intensifiers: quite and rather. When quite and rather modify at...
While phonological features are often assumed to be innate and universal (Chomsky and Halle, 1968), ...
I argue there are four classes of adjectives relevant to syntactic ordering: predicative/intersectiv...
[Abstract] Our main purpose in this paper is to look into the place of adjectives in a particular pe...
This paper examines the syntactic distribution of degree modifiers in both spoken and written Englis...
This paper focuses on a class of English adjectives that are subject to important restrictions on th...
1 A certain class of English adjectives known as a-adjectives resists appearing attributively as pre...
The book is concerned with a hitherto underresearched grammaticalization process: the development fr...
This study is concerned with the examination of word-order universals and the attempt to explain the...
[EN] This article explores a type of co-occurrence pattern which cannot be adequately described by e...
Children master adjectives at a later stage in development compared to other word classes (Ravid & L...
This thesis explores the analysis of English adjectives and adjectivals, in particular those which ...
I investigate the use of two English intensifiers: quite and rather. When quite and rather modify at...
grantor: University of TorontoMost current linguistic theories--whose main proponents are ...
Structuralists and generativists define word classes distributionally (Palmer 1971, Baker 2003, Aart...
I investigate the use of two English intensifiers: quite and rather. When quite and rather modify at...
While phonological features are often assumed to be innate and universal (Chomsky and Halle, 1968), ...
I argue there are four classes of adjectives relevant to syntactic ordering: predicative/intersectiv...
[Abstract] Our main purpose in this paper is to look into the place of adjectives in a particular pe...
This paper examines the syntactic distribution of degree modifiers in both spoken and written Englis...