The problem undertaken here is to account for the relational placement in English of words traditionally known as adjectives and nouns. Two distinct orders are examined as signals of discrete meanings: one where the characterizing word is preposed to the characterized word, as in long hair, and the other where it is postposed, as in hair long. Distribution of the two signals in attested text is accounted for under the hypothesis that an Assertion of Characterization is made WEAKER or STRONGER, respectively, through this word order. With these meanings, a writer draws a distinction between Characterization the writer assumes the reader will receive as uncontested and so requires WEAKER Assertion and Characterization which is selected out of ...
Word-order rules impose major constraints on linguistic behavior. For example, adjectives appear bef...
I propose that ordering restrictions among adjectives (e.g., the big gray poodle) are driven by the ...
ABSTRACT—Word-order rules impose major constraints on linguistic behavior. For example, adjectives a...
Which is more correct, the “big fat cat” or the “fat big cat?” Why is a particular order preferred? ...
In this article we identify and motivate the main word order patterns of adjectives in the English N...
We contrasted two hypotheses concerning how speakers determine adjective order during referential co...
From English to Hungarian to Mokilese, speakers exhibit strong ordering preferences in multi-adjecti...
This paper focuses on the ordering of adjectival pre-modifiers in the English noun phrase. Our analy...
In this paper, we introduce the issue of adjective order and show that different approaches vary in ...
This paper is concerned with the question of which factors govern prenominal adjective order (AO) in...
Recent work has used artificial language experiments to argue that hierarchical representations driv...
There are differences in constituent ordering within the determiner phrase (DP) between English and ...
Adjective ordering preferences are robustly attested in English and many unrelated languages. In nom...
PhDThe present thesis investigates adjective ordering across languages, with an emphasis on Greek an...
I argue there are four classes of adjectives relevant to syntactic ordering: predicative/intersectiv...
Word-order rules impose major constraints on linguistic behavior. For example, adjectives appear bef...
I propose that ordering restrictions among adjectives (e.g., the big gray poodle) are driven by the ...
ABSTRACT—Word-order rules impose major constraints on linguistic behavior. For example, adjectives a...
Which is more correct, the “big fat cat” or the “fat big cat?” Why is a particular order preferred? ...
In this article we identify and motivate the main word order patterns of adjectives in the English N...
We contrasted two hypotheses concerning how speakers determine adjective order during referential co...
From English to Hungarian to Mokilese, speakers exhibit strong ordering preferences in multi-adjecti...
This paper focuses on the ordering of adjectival pre-modifiers in the English noun phrase. Our analy...
In this paper, we introduce the issue of adjective order and show that different approaches vary in ...
This paper is concerned with the question of which factors govern prenominal adjective order (AO) in...
Recent work has used artificial language experiments to argue that hierarchical representations driv...
There are differences in constituent ordering within the determiner phrase (DP) between English and ...
Adjective ordering preferences are robustly attested in English and many unrelated languages. In nom...
PhDThe present thesis investigates adjective ordering across languages, with an emphasis on Greek an...
I argue there are four classes of adjectives relevant to syntactic ordering: predicative/intersectiv...
Word-order rules impose major constraints on linguistic behavior. For example, adjectives appear bef...
I propose that ordering restrictions among adjectives (e.g., the big gray poodle) are driven by the ...
ABSTRACT—Word-order rules impose major constraints on linguistic behavior. For example, adjectives a...