Skip to main content

Notes from the Linguistic Underground

Syntax and Semantics

  • 1st Edition - January 1, 1976
  • Latest edition
  • Editor: James D. McCawley
  • Language: English

Syntax and Semantics, Volume 7: Notes from the Linguistic Underground is a collection of articles that were written in the 1960s, which has never before appeared in a regular,… Read more

World Book Day celebration

Where learning shapes lives

Up to 25% off trusted resources that support research, study, and discovery.

Description

Syntax and Semantics, Volume 7: Notes from the Linguistic Underground is a collection of articles that were written in the 1960s, which has never before appeared in a regular, English language publication. The papers contained in this compendium provide the history and information on the development of transformational grammar and generative semantics. The book presents articles that discuss topics on reflexivization, transformations, past tense replacement and the modal system, and pro-sentential forms and their implications for English sentence structure. Papers that tackle syntactic orientation, some constraints on pronominalization, discourse referents, and the verb-object agreement rule and the wh-movement rule in Hungarian are likewise included. Linguists and linguistic historians will find the book invaluable.

Table of contents


List of Contributors

Foreword

Contents of Previous Volumes

Introduction


1. Optical Illusions and Grammar Blindness


2. What Are Transformations?


3. Toward Generative Semantics

I. A Critique of Some Present Notions about Meaning

II. The Generative Approach


4. Reflexivization 63

Reflexivization I

Reflexivization II


5. Past Tense Replacement and the Modal System


6. Why You Can't Do So Into the Sink

A. Background

B. A Test


7. Concerning the Notion "Base Component of a Transformational Grammar"


8. Mind and Body

i. Physical and Mental Predicates

ii. Selectional Restrictions

iii. Statements about Perception

iv. Identification of Particulars

v. Ownership

vi. Mind-Body Influence

vii. Body-Mind Influence

1974 Comments


9. Is Deep Structure Necessary?


10. Pro-Sentential Forms and Their Implications for English Sentence Structure


11. Linguistic Anarchy Notes

Introduction

Series A: Horrors of Identity

Series F: That Much-Beloved Semantics-Free Syntax


12. Linguistic Harmony Notes

Series A: Charms of Identity


13. On the Historical Source of Immediate Constituent Analysis


14. More Evidence for a Cycle of Transformations?


15. Camelot, 1968

I. Introduction

II. Current Status of the Base Component

III. Selectional Anomaly

IV. The Implications of Semantax: Lexical Insertion, the Notion "Possible Lexical Item," the Well-Formedness of Underlying Structures


16. Pronouns and Reference

1. Some Constraints on Pronominalization

2. Types of Linguistic Identity


17. Cryptic Note II and WAGS III

Cryptic Note II: Again, and then Again...WAGS III


18. Syntactic Orientation as a Semantic Property


19. Discourse Referents

0. Introduction

1. Case Studies

2. Specificity

3. Summary


20. Some Notes on English Modals

Will

Can

Must


21. The 23 Verbs pretend


22. On a Surface Structure Constraint in Hungarian

Glossary

References

Index

Product details

  • Edition: 1
  • Latest edition
  • Published: January 1, 1976
  • Language: English