Perhaps the earliest linguistic resource we have as babies learning to mean is the noun in categorizing the objects around us. The conventional association between the noun and the entity it denotes becomes exploited in use and the speaker learns that through grammar he or she can use nominal expressions to refer. This is one of our most powerful resources. The referring nominal group has the greatest potential for complexity and can serve as a measure of a text's 'nominality' and its density, including its role as an index of register. In Halliday's 1966 paper Grammar, Society and the Noun, he sought to consider "certain questions of language from the outside" (p. 50). In this paper, I will also look at certain questions of language but in...
The starting point for this book is a relatively unusual phenomenon – the lexicalisation of verbal a...
Philosophers of language inspired by Grice have long sought to show how facts about reference boil d...
Based on a Relevance Theory-informed view of language development, this paper argues that grammatica...
Perhaps the earliest linguistic resource we have as babies learning to mean is the noun in categoriz...
Reference is a major theme in the study of language and language use. Providing a relevance-theoreti...
© Cambridge University Press 1997This paper examines the relationship between the use of names and o...
How do speakers refer to entities? This question has been addressed by both psycholinguists and comp...
This paper argues that nouns and names, as such, do not refer. Apparently-referring nouns and names ...
peer reviewedThis article develops foundations for a new typology of nominal expressions. Despite th...
This paper attempts to account for various uses of nominal reference forms in English conversational...
A fundamental part of the process of referring to an entity is to categorise it (for instance, as th...
Human speakers generally find it easy to refer to entities in such a way that their hearers can dete...
A simple formalism is proposed to represent the contexts in which pronouns, definite /indefinite d...
This thesis explores the relevant systems which model the choices speakers make when referring to ob...
This thesis presents an empirical investigation into the nature and degree of nominality, from a sem...
The starting point for this book is a relatively unusual phenomenon – the lexicalisation of verbal a...
Philosophers of language inspired by Grice have long sought to show how facts about reference boil d...
Based on a Relevance Theory-informed view of language development, this paper argues that grammatica...
Perhaps the earliest linguistic resource we have as babies learning to mean is the noun in categoriz...
Reference is a major theme in the study of language and language use. Providing a relevance-theoreti...
© Cambridge University Press 1997This paper examines the relationship between the use of names and o...
How do speakers refer to entities? This question has been addressed by both psycholinguists and comp...
This paper argues that nouns and names, as such, do not refer. Apparently-referring nouns and names ...
peer reviewedThis article develops foundations for a new typology of nominal expressions. Despite th...
This paper attempts to account for various uses of nominal reference forms in English conversational...
A fundamental part of the process of referring to an entity is to categorise it (for instance, as th...
Human speakers generally find it easy to refer to entities in such a way that their hearers can dete...
A simple formalism is proposed to represent the contexts in which pronouns, definite /indefinite d...
This thesis explores the relevant systems which model the choices speakers make when referring to ob...
This thesis presents an empirical investigation into the nature and degree of nominality, from a sem...
The starting point for this book is a relatively unusual phenomenon – the lexicalisation of verbal a...
Philosophers of language inspired by Grice have long sought to show how facts about reference boil d...
Based on a Relevance Theory-informed view of language development, this paper argues that grammatica...