465015257 03 01 01 JB code JB John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 JB code SLCS 158 Hb 15 9789027259233 06 10.1075/slcs.158 13 2014013631 00 BB 08 560 gr 10 01 JB code SLCS 02 0165-7763 02 158.00 01 02 Studies in Language Companion Series Studies in Language Companion Series 01 01 Noun Valency Noun Valency 1 B01 01 JB code 760205768 Olga Spevak Spevak, Olga Olga Spevak University of Toulouse 2 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/760205768 01 eng 11 229 03 03 xvi 03 00 213 03 01 23 415/.5 03 2014 P271 04 Grammar, Comparative and general--Noun phrase. 04 Grammar, Comparative and general--Nominals. 04 Grammar, Comparative and general--Verb. 04 Grammar, Comparative and general--Syntax. 04 Dependency grammar. 10 LAN009000 12 CFK 24 JB code LIN.SEMAN Semantics 24 JB code LIN.SYNTAX Syntax 24 JB code LIN.THEOR Theoretical linguistics 01 06 02 00 This volume aims to contribute to the discussion of noun valency not only from a theoretical point of view, as is often the case, but also from an empirical one by presenting a series of studies focusing on particular questions and based on data-driven research. 03 00 Despite a recent spate of publications, the valency of nouns is a topic that still remains in the shadow of the valency of verbs. This volume aims to contribute to the discussion of noun valency not only from a theoretical point of view, as is often the case, but also from an empirical one by presenting a series of studies focusing on particular questions and based on data-driven research. It explores properties of valency nouns in a variety of languages, including Bulgarian, Czech, German, Latin, Romanian, and Spanish. The specificity of this book consists in the diversity of the methodological approaches used. It includes empirical studies and it explores different theoretical frameworks: Head-driven Phrase Structure Grammar (HPSG), the Minimalist Program within Generative Grammar, Functional Generative Description (FGD), and Construction Grammar. Special attention is paid to deverbal nouns, but nouns expressing quantity and “compound-like” constructions involving relationship and interactivity are also dealt with. 01 00 03 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/475/slcs.158.png 01 01 D502 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_jpg/9789027259233.jpg 01 01 D504 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_tif/9789027259233.tif 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_front/slcs.158.hb.png 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/125/slcs.158.png 02 00 03 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_back/slcs.158.hb.png 03 00 03 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/3d_web/slcs.158.hb.png 01 01 JB code slcs.158.001abb 06 10.1075/slcs.158.001abb vii viii 2 Article 1 01 04 Abbreviations Abbreviations 01 eng 01 01 JB code slcs.158.002edi 06 10.1075/slcs.158.002edi ix xiv 6 Article 2 01 04 Editor's foreword Editor’s foreword 01 eng 01 01 JB code slcs.158.003con 06 10.1075/slcs.158.003con xv xvi 2 Article 3 01 04 Contributors Contributors 01 eng 01 01 JB code slcs.158.01pan 06 10.1075/slcs.158.01pan 1 18 18 Article 4 01 04 Chapter 1. Contribution of valency to the analysis of language Chapter 1. Contribution of valency to the analysis of language 1 A01 01 JB code 898212196 Jarmila Panevová Panevová, Jarmila Jarmila Panevová Charles University, Prague Faculty of Mathematics and Physics 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/898212196 01 eng 30 00 The main criteria used for the valency of verbs in the framework of Functional Generative Description (FGD) are introduced, leading to the recognition of three classes of verbal modifications : inner participants (IPs), obligatory free modifications (FMs), and quasivalency modifiers (QMs). The sources of surface deletions of valency modifications are presented. For an analysis of noun valency, word formation is taken into consideration. The criteria proposed for the valency of verbs are applied in order to determine the valency of deverbal nouns. Conversion of the verbal valency frame into the valency frame of the noun is accompanied by formal changes in the morphemic form of inner participants. The behavior of specific noun modifiers is studied with regard to their position in the corresponding valency frame (VF). 01 01 JB code slcs.158.02kol 06 10.1075/slcs.158.02kol 19 60 42 Article 5 01 04 Chapter 2. Special valency behavior of Czech deverbal nouns Chapter 2. Special valency behavior of Czech deverbal nouns 1 A01 01 JB code 268212197 Veronika Kolářová Kolářová, Veronika Veronika Kolářová Charles University, Prague Faculty of Mathematics and Physics 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/268212197 01 eng 30 00 This chapter provides an in-depth analysis of the valency properties of Czech deverbal nouns. It focuses on the forms of complementation they take. These can be typical, related to those of the source verbs, or special, without any relationship to them. We present an overview of these special shifts in valency. Special forms of participants have an impact on the syntactic behavior of the noun and its meaning. We argue that it is not always a plain shift in meaning but sometimes only a slight meaning nuance. Such nouns with special forms of participants require creating a new valency frame; they represent a separate category on the boundary between syntactic and lexical derivation. 01 01 JB code slcs.158.03bek 06 10.1075/slcs.158.03bek 61 88 28 Article 6 01 04 Chapter 3. Nominalizations of Spanish perception verbs at the syntax-semantics interface Chapter 3. Nominalizations of Spanish perception verbs at the syntax–semantics interface 1 A01 01 JB code 761212198 Elisa Bekaert Bekaert, Elisa Elisa Bekaert Ghent University 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/761212198 2 A01 01 JB code 808212199 Renata Enghels Enghels, Renata Renata Enghels Ghent University 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/808212199 01 eng 30 00 Most studies on nominalization focus on nouns derived from action verbs and pay little attention to other semantic types. This article aims to fill this gap by studying a group of perception nominalizations in Spanish. It is well known that the semantic distinctions that cross the field of perception (corresponding to the perception modalities and agentivity of the perceiver) influence the syntax of the corresponding verbs, and especially their complementing pattern. Yet, it has not been studied to what extent these oppositions have an impact on the argument structure of perception nominalizations. Moreover, as opposed to previous analyses, which mainly focus on theoretical assumptions of the nominalization process, this study is corpus-based and provides a quantitative as well as a qualitative analysis. 01 01 JB code slcs.158.04dvo 06 10.1075/slcs.158.04dvo 89 112 24 Article 7 01 04 Chapter 4. Case assignment, aspect, and (non-)expression of patients Chapter 4. Case assignment, aspect, and (non-)expression of patients 01 04 A study of the internal structure of Czech verbal nouns A study of the internal structure of Czech verbal nouns 1 A01 01 JB code 232212200 Věra Dvořák Dvořák, Věra Věra Dvořák Rutgers University 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/232212200 01 eng 30 00 After reviewing various surface realizations of agents, patients and goals in Czech nominalizations, I present a syntactic analysis which straightforwardly accounts for the case form of these arguments, based on the well-known idea in the literature that nouns can share with verbs a substantive part of the extended verbal projection. Moreover, both imperfective verbs and nouns can combine with null existentially interpreted patients while neither perfective verbs nor perfective nouns allow them. I explain this as the interaction of the properties of verbal Aspect/Quantity category and the missing number projection of implicit patients. Finally, I show that only nominals (regardless of their aspectual value) but not verbs can combine with null patients referring to an entity from the previous discourse. 01 01 JB code slcs.158.05bar 06 10.1075/slcs.158.05bar 113 140 28 Article 8 01 04 Chapter 5. A data-driven analysis of the structure type `man-nature relationship' in Romanian Chapter 5. A data-driven analysis of the structure type ‘man–nature relationship’ in Romanian 1 A01 01 JB code 518212201 Ana-Maria Barbu Barbu, Ana-Maria Ana-Maria Barbu Romanian Academy, Bucharest 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/518212201 01 eng 30 00 The Romanian tri-nominal juxtaposition structure relaÈ›ie om – natură ‘man-nature relationship’ is cross-linguistically widespread and typical of a series of relational nouns, such as agreement, interaction, and mixture, which can have a “compound” expansion (CanadaU.S. agreement, parentchild interaction, airwater mixture, etc.). Our analysis is twofold: we first examine the grammatical relationship between relaÈ›ie ‘relationship’ and om – natură ‘man–nature’, and second the construction om – natură. On the basis of data from a large Romanian newspaper corpus, we show that the “compound” construction om – natură is in fact a free phrase; we call it a Relational Coordination Construction (RCC). It usually embodies valency complements of a relational noun, and it semantically implies reciprocity. The analysis adopts a non-transformational, data-driven perspective within the Construction Grammar framework. 01 01 JB code slcs.158.06ose 06 10.1075/slcs.158.06ose 141 160 20 Article 9 01 04 Chapter 6. Classifier noun phrases of the type N1N2 in Bulgarian Chapter 6. Classifier noun phrases of the type N1N2 in Bulgarian 1 A01 01 JB code 15212202 Petya Osenova Osenova, Petya Petya Osenova Sofia University 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/15212202 01 eng 30 00 This chapter discusses classifier* noun phrases of the type Noun1 Noun2 (N1N2) in Bulgarian. The data analysis and the language-specific properties described show that the apposition-like relation between the two nouns is in fact a government relation. For that reason, within the framework of Head-driven Phrase Structure Grammar (HPSG) I consider classifier noun phrases to be phrases of type head–complement, where the first noun (N1) is the syntactic and semantic head, while the second (N2) is an argument, which, however, might be optional on the syntactic level. Three semantic subtypes are presented and discussed: measure – substance, container – contained, and form of grouping – grouped entities. The fine-grained distinctions among them are also made explicit within the ideas of qualia structure and the generative lexicon. 01 01 JB code slcs.158.07res 06 10.1075/slcs.158.07res 161 182 22 Article 10 01 04 Chapter 7. Noun phrasal complements vs. adjuncts Chapter 7. Noun phrasal complements vs. adjuncts 1 A01 01 JB code 348212203 Rossella Resi Resi, Rossella Rossella Resi University of Verona 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/348212203 01 eng 30 00 This paper draws a parallel between verbs selecting phrasal complements or adjuncts and nouns followed by Relative clauses (RCs), referring in particular to German. According to Meinunger (2000) a restrictive relative clause (RRC) attached to a noun and a sentential complement of a factive verb are both sister complement phrases (CPs) of lexical heads. This paper aims at providing evidence of the fact that a RRC and its head are linked by a head-complement-relationship while a non-restrictive relative clause (NRRC) can be seen as an adjunction to its head. NRRCs merge with maximal projection late in the derivation of the associated clause rather than being selected by a lexical head during the construction of the matrix clause. This paper presents evidence for this difference, such as the parallelism with Haegeman (2002–2008)’s dichotomy between central and peripheral clauses. 01 01 JB code slcs.158.08spe 06 10.1075/slcs.158.08spe 183 210 28 Article 11 01 04 Chapter 8. Noun valency in Latin Chapter 8. Noun valency in Latin 1 A01 01 JB code 536212204 Olga Spevak Spevak, Olga Olga Spevak University of Toulouse 2 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/536212204 01 eng 30 00 This article has two objectives. The first is to present an account of valency nouns in Latin. Lyons’ typology (1977) envisaging three orders of entities is useful for predicting the number and type of complements used with various nouns. Expansions of all the categories are distinguished: concrete entities, relational nouns, agent nouns, verbal nouns, and nouns expressing qualities. Furthermore, Latin shows interesting phenomena closely related to noun valency, namely nominalization of verbal notions in Early Latin and the construction of the dominant participle. The second objective is to examine argument marking at the noun phrase level. The genitive is the “adnominal” case par excellence; other cases (the dative, accusative, and ablative) as well as prepositional phrases are atypical noun complements in Latin, and furthermore they are often restricted to specific categories of nouns. 01 01 JB code slcs.158.09ind 06 10.1075/slcs.158.09ind 211 213 3 Article 12 01 04 Index Index 01 eng 01 JB code JBENJAMINS John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 01 JB code JB John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 https://benjamins.com 02 https://benjamins.com/catalog/slcs.158 Amsterdam NL 00 John Benjamins Publishing Company Marketing Department / Karin Plijnaar, Pieter Lamers onix@benjamins.nl 04 01 00 20140619 C 2014 John Benjamins D 2014 John Benjamins 02 WORLD WORLD US CA MX 09 01 JB 1 John Benjamins Publishing Company +31 20 6304747 +31 20 6739773 bookorder@benjamins.nl 01 https://benjamins.com 21 17 22 01 00 Unqualified price 02 JB 1 02 99.00 EUR 02 00 Unqualified price 02 83.00 01 Z 0 GBP GB US CA MX 01 01 JB 2 John Benjamins Publishing Company +1 800 562-5666 +1 703 661-1501 benjamins@presswarehouse.com 01 https://benjamins.com 21 17 22 01 00 Unqualified price 02 JB 1 02 149.00 USD 755015258 03 01 01 JB code JB John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 JB code SLCS 158 Eb 15 9789027269980 06 10.1075/slcs.158 00 EA E107 10 01 JB code SLCS 02 0165-7763 02 158.00 01 02 Studies in Language Companion Series Studies in Language Companion Series 11 01 JB code jbe-all 01 02 Full EBA collection (ca. 4,200 titles) 11 01 JB code jbe-2015-all 01 02 Complete backlist (3,208 titles, 1967–2015) 05 02 Complete backlist (1967–2015) 11 01 JB code jbe-2015-linguistics 01 02 Subject collection: Linguistics (2,773 titles, 1967–2015) 05 02 Linguistics (1967–2015) 11 01 JB code jbe-2015-slcs 01 02 Studies in Language Companion Series (vols. 1–171, 1978–2015) 05 02 SLCS (vols. 1–171, 1978–2015) 01 01 Noun Valency Noun Valency 1 B01 01 JB code 760205768 Olga Spevak Spevak, Olga Olga Spevak University of Toulouse 2 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/760205768 01 eng 11 229 03 03 xvi 03 00 213 03 01 23 415/.5 03 2014 P271 04 Grammar, Comparative and general--Noun phrase. 04 Grammar, Comparative and general--Nominals. 04 Grammar, Comparative and general--Verb. 04 Grammar, Comparative and general--Syntax. 04 Dependency grammar. 10 LAN009000 12 CFK 24 JB code LIN.SEMAN Semantics 24 JB code LIN.SYNTAX Syntax 24 JB code LIN.THEOR Theoretical linguistics 01 06 02 00 This volume aims to contribute to the discussion of noun valency not only from a theoretical point of view, as is often the case, but also from an empirical one by presenting a series of studies focusing on particular questions and based on data-driven research. 03 00 Despite a recent spate of publications, the valency of nouns is a topic that still remains in the shadow of the valency of verbs. This volume aims to contribute to the discussion of noun valency not only from a theoretical point of view, as is often the case, but also from an empirical one by presenting a series of studies focusing on particular questions and based on data-driven research. It explores properties of valency nouns in a variety of languages, including Bulgarian, Czech, German, Latin, Romanian, and Spanish. The specificity of this book consists in the diversity of the methodological approaches used. It includes empirical studies and it explores different theoretical frameworks: Head-driven Phrase Structure Grammar (HPSG), the Minimalist Program within Generative Grammar, Functional Generative Description (FGD), and Construction Grammar. Special attention is paid to deverbal nouns, but nouns expressing quantity and “compound-like” constructions involving relationship and interactivity are also dealt with. 01 00 03 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/475/slcs.158.png 01 01 D502 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_jpg/9789027259233.jpg 01 01 D504 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_tif/9789027259233.tif 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_front/slcs.158.hb.png 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/125/slcs.158.png 02 00 03 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_back/slcs.158.hb.png 03 00 03 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/3d_web/slcs.158.hb.png 01 01 JB code slcs.158.001abb 06 10.1075/slcs.158.001abb vii viii 2 Article 1 01 04 Abbreviations Abbreviations 01 eng 01 01 JB code slcs.158.002edi 06 10.1075/slcs.158.002edi ix xiv 6 Article 2 01 04 Editor's foreword Editor’s foreword 01 eng 01 01 JB code slcs.158.003con 06 10.1075/slcs.158.003con xv xvi 2 Article 3 01 04 Contributors Contributors 01 eng 01 01 JB code slcs.158.01pan 06 10.1075/slcs.158.01pan 1 18 18 Article 4 01 04 Chapter 1. Contribution of valency to the analysis of language Chapter 1. Contribution of valency to the analysis of language 1 A01 01 JB code 898212196 Jarmila Panevová Panevová, Jarmila Jarmila Panevová Charles University, Prague Faculty of Mathematics and Physics 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/898212196 01 eng 30 00 The main criteria used for the valency of verbs in the framework of Functional Generative Description (FGD) are introduced, leading to the recognition of three classes of verbal modifications : inner participants (IPs), obligatory free modifications (FMs), and quasivalency modifiers (QMs). The sources of surface deletions of valency modifications are presented. For an analysis of noun valency, word formation is taken into consideration. The criteria proposed for the valency of verbs are applied in order to determine the valency of deverbal nouns. Conversion of the verbal valency frame into the valency frame of the noun is accompanied by formal changes in the morphemic form of inner participants. The behavior of specific noun modifiers is studied with regard to their position in the corresponding valency frame (VF). 01 01 JB code slcs.158.02kol 06 10.1075/slcs.158.02kol 19 60 42 Article 5 01 04 Chapter 2. Special valency behavior of Czech deverbal nouns Chapter 2. Special valency behavior of Czech deverbal nouns 1 A01 01 JB code 268212197 Veronika Kolářová Kolářová, Veronika Veronika Kolářová Charles University, Prague Faculty of Mathematics and Physics 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/268212197 01 eng 30 00 This chapter provides an in-depth analysis of the valency properties of Czech deverbal nouns. It focuses on the forms of complementation they take. These can be typical, related to those of the source verbs, or special, without any relationship to them. We present an overview of these special shifts in valency. Special forms of participants have an impact on the syntactic behavior of the noun and its meaning. We argue that it is not always a plain shift in meaning but sometimes only a slight meaning nuance. Such nouns with special forms of participants require creating a new valency frame; they represent a separate category on the boundary between syntactic and lexical derivation. 01 01 JB code slcs.158.03bek 06 10.1075/slcs.158.03bek 61 88 28 Article 6 01 04 Chapter 3. Nominalizations of Spanish perception verbs at the syntax-semantics interface Chapter 3. Nominalizations of Spanish perception verbs at the syntax–semantics interface 1 A01 01 JB code 761212198 Elisa Bekaert Bekaert, Elisa Elisa Bekaert Ghent University 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/761212198 2 A01 01 JB code 808212199 Renata Enghels Enghels, Renata Renata Enghels Ghent University 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/808212199 01 eng 30 00 Most studies on nominalization focus on nouns derived from action verbs and pay little attention to other semantic types. This article aims to fill this gap by studying a group of perception nominalizations in Spanish. It is well known that the semantic distinctions that cross the field of perception (corresponding to the perception modalities and agentivity of the perceiver) influence the syntax of the corresponding verbs, and especially their complementing pattern. Yet, it has not been studied to what extent these oppositions have an impact on the argument structure of perception nominalizations. Moreover, as opposed to previous analyses, which mainly focus on theoretical assumptions of the nominalization process, this study is corpus-based and provides a quantitative as well as a qualitative analysis. 01 01 JB code slcs.158.04dvo 06 10.1075/slcs.158.04dvo 89 112 24 Article 7 01 04 Chapter 4. Case assignment, aspect, and (non-)expression of patients Chapter 4. Case assignment, aspect, and (non-)expression of patients 01 04 A study of the internal structure of Czech verbal nouns A study of the internal structure of Czech verbal nouns 1 A01 01 JB code 232212200 Věra Dvořák Dvořák, Věra Věra Dvořák Rutgers University 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/232212200 01 eng 30 00 After reviewing various surface realizations of agents, patients and goals in Czech nominalizations, I present a syntactic analysis which straightforwardly accounts for the case form of these arguments, based on the well-known idea in the literature that nouns can share with verbs a substantive part of the extended verbal projection. Moreover, both imperfective verbs and nouns can combine with null existentially interpreted patients while neither perfective verbs nor perfective nouns allow them. I explain this as the interaction of the properties of verbal Aspect/Quantity category and the missing number projection of implicit patients. Finally, I show that only nominals (regardless of their aspectual value) but not verbs can combine with null patients referring to an entity from the previous discourse. 01 01 JB code slcs.158.05bar 06 10.1075/slcs.158.05bar 113 140 28 Article 8 01 04 Chapter 5. A data-driven analysis of the structure type `man-nature relationship' in Romanian Chapter 5. A data-driven analysis of the structure type ‘man–nature relationship’ in Romanian 1 A01 01 JB code 518212201 Ana-Maria Barbu Barbu, Ana-Maria Ana-Maria Barbu Romanian Academy, Bucharest 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/518212201 01 eng 30 00 The Romanian tri-nominal juxtaposition structure relaÈ›ie om – natură ‘man-nature relationship’ is cross-linguistically widespread and typical of a series of relational nouns, such as agreement, interaction, and mixture, which can have a “compound” expansion (CanadaU.S. agreement, parentchild interaction, airwater mixture, etc.). Our analysis is twofold: we first examine the grammatical relationship between relaÈ›ie ‘relationship’ and om – natură ‘man–nature’, and second the construction om – natură. On the basis of data from a large Romanian newspaper corpus, we show that the “compound” construction om – natură is in fact a free phrase; we call it a Relational Coordination Construction (RCC). It usually embodies valency complements of a relational noun, and it semantically implies reciprocity. The analysis adopts a non-transformational, data-driven perspective within the Construction Grammar framework. 01 01 JB code slcs.158.06ose 06 10.1075/slcs.158.06ose 141 160 20 Article 9 01 04 Chapter 6. Classifier noun phrases of the type N1N2 in Bulgarian Chapter 6. Classifier noun phrases of the type N1N2 in Bulgarian 1 A01 01 JB code 15212202 Petya Osenova Osenova, Petya Petya Osenova Sofia University 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/15212202 01 eng 30 00 This chapter discusses classifier* noun phrases of the type Noun1 Noun2 (N1N2) in Bulgarian. The data analysis and the language-specific properties described show that the apposition-like relation between the two nouns is in fact a government relation. For that reason, within the framework of Head-driven Phrase Structure Grammar (HPSG) I consider classifier noun phrases to be phrases of type head–complement, where the first noun (N1) is the syntactic and semantic head, while the second (N2) is an argument, which, however, might be optional on the syntactic level. Three semantic subtypes are presented and discussed: measure – substance, container – contained, and form of grouping – grouped entities. The fine-grained distinctions among them are also made explicit within the ideas of qualia structure and the generative lexicon. 01 01 JB code slcs.158.07res 06 10.1075/slcs.158.07res 161 182 22 Article 10 01 04 Chapter 7. Noun phrasal complements vs. adjuncts Chapter 7. Noun phrasal complements vs. adjuncts 1 A01 01 JB code 348212203 Rossella Resi Resi, Rossella Rossella Resi University of Verona 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/348212203 01 eng 30 00 This paper draws a parallel between verbs selecting phrasal complements or adjuncts and nouns followed by Relative clauses (RCs), referring in particular to German. According to Meinunger (2000) a restrictive relative clause (RRC) attached to a noun and a sentential complement of a factive verb are both sister complement phrases (CPs) of lexical heads. This paper aims at providing evidence of the fact that a RRC and its head are linked by a head-complement-relationship while a non-restrictive relative clause (NRRC) can be seen as an adjunction to its head. NRRCs merge with maximal projection late in the derivation of the associated clause rather than being selected by a lexical head during the construction of the matrix clause. This paper presents evidence for this difference, such as the parallelism with Haegeman (2002–2008)’s dichotomy between central and peripheral clauses. 01 01 JB code slcs.158.08spe 06 10.1075/slcs.158.08spe 183 210 28 Article 11 01 04 Chapter 8. Noun valency in Latin Chapter 8. Noun valency in Latin 1 A01 01 JB code 536212204 Olga Spevak Spevak, Olga Olga Spevak University of Toulouse 2 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/536212204 01 eng 30 00 This article has two objectives. The first is to present an account of valency nouns in Latin. Lyons’ typology (1977) envisaging three orders of entities is useful for predicting the number and type of complements used with various nouns. Expansions of all the categories are distinguished: concrete entities, relational nouns, agent nouns, verbal nouns, and nouns expressing qualities. Furthermore, Latin shows interesting phenomena closely related to noun valency, namely nominalization of verbal notions in Early Latin and the construction of the dominant participle. The second objective is to examine argument marking at the noun phrase level. The genitive is the “adnominal” case par excellence; other cases (the dative, accusative, and ablative) as well as prepositional phrases are atypical noun complements in Latin, and furthermore they are often restricted to specific categories of nouns. 01 01 JB code slcs.158.09ind 06 10.1075/slcs.158.09ind 211 213 3 Article 12 01 04 Index Index 01 eng 01 JB code JBENJAMINS John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 01 JB code JB John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 https://benjamins.com 02 https://benjamins.com/catalog/slcs.158 Amsterdam NL 00 John Benjamins Publishing Company Marketing Department / Karin Plijnaar, Pieter Lamers onix@benjamins.nl 04 01 00 20140619 C 2014 John Benjamins D 2014 John Benjamins 02 WORLD 13 15 9789027259233 WORLD 09 01 JB 3 John Benjamins e-Platform 03 https://jbe-platform.com 29 https://jbe-platform.com/content/books/9789027269980 21 01 00 Unqualified price 02 99.00 EUR 01 00 Unqualified price 02 83.00 GBP GB 01 00 Unqualified price 02 149.00 USD 970015663 03 01 01 JB code JB John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 JB code SLCS 158 GE 15 9789027269980 06 10.1075/slcs.158 00 EA E133 10 01 JB code SLCS 02 JB code 0165-7763 02 158.00 01 02 Studies in Language Companion Series Studies in Language Companion Series 01 01 Noun Valency Noun Valency 1 B01 01 JB code 760205768 Olga Spevak Spevak, Olga Olga Spevak University of Toulouse 2 01 eng 11 229 03 03 xvi 03 00 213 03 24 JB code LIN.SEMAN Semantics 24 JB code LIN.SYNTAX Syntax 24 JB code LIN.THEOR Theoretical linguistics 10 LAN009000 12 CFK 01 06 02 00 This volume aims to contribute to the discussion of noun valency not only from a theoretical point of view, as is often the case, but also from an empirical one by presenting a series of studies focusing on particular questions and based on data-driven research. 03 00 Despite a recent spate of publications, the valency of nouns is a topic that still remains in the shadow of the valency of verbs. This volume aims to contribute to the discussion of noun valency not only from a theoretical point of view, as is often the case, but also from an empirical one by presenting a series of studies focusing on particular questions and based on data-driven research. It explores properties of valency nouns in a variety of languages, including Bulgarian, Czech, German, Latin, Romanian, and Spanish. The specificity of this book consists in the diversity of the methodological approaches used. It includes empirical studies and it explores different theoretical frameworks: Head-driven Phrase Structure Grammar (HPSG), the Minimalist Program within Generative Grammar, Functional Generative Description (FGD), and Construction Grammar. Special attention is paid to deverbal nouns, but nouns expressing quantity and “compound-like” constructions involving relationship and interactivity are also dealt with. 01 00 03 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/475/slcs.158.png 01 01 D502 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_jpg/9789027259233.jpg 01 01 D504 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_tif/9789027259233.tif 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_front/slcs.158.hb.png 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/125/slcs.158.png 02 00 03 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_back/slcs.158.hb.png 03 00 03 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/3d_web/slcs.158.hb.png 01 01 JB code slcs.158.001abb 06 10.1075/slcs.158.001abb vii viii 2 Article 1 01 04 Abbreviations Abbreviations 01 01 JB code slcs.158.002edi 06 10.1075/slcs.158.002edi ix xiv 6 Article 2 01 04 Editor's foreword Editor’s foreword 01 01 JB code slcs.158.003con 06 10.1075/slcs.158.003con xv xvi 2 Article 3 01 04 Contributors Contributors 01 01 JB code slcs.158.01pan 06 10.1075/slcs.158.01pan 1 18 18 Article 4 01 04 Chapter 1. Contribution of valency to the analysis of language Chapter 1. Contribution of valency to the analysis of language 1 A01 01 JB code 898212196 Jarmila Panevová Panevová, Jarmila Jarmila Panevová Charles University, Prague Faculty of Mathematics and Physics 01 01 JB code slcs.158.02kol 06 10.1075/slcs.158.02kol 19 60 42 Article 5 01 04 Chapter 2. Special valency behavior of Czech deverbal nouns Chapter 2. Special valency behavior of Czech deverbal nouns 1 A01 01 JB code 268212197 Veronika Kolářová Kolářová, Veronika Veronika Kolářová Charles University, Prague Faculty of Mathematics and Physics 01 01 JB code slcs.158.03bek 06 10.1075/slcs.158.03bek 61 88 28 Article 6 01 04 Chapter 3. Nominalizations of Spanish perception verbs at the syntax-semantics interface Chapter 3. Nominalizations of Spanish perception verbs at the syntax–semantics interface 1 A01 01 JB code 761212198 Elisa Bekaert Bekaert, Elisa Elisa Bekaert Ghent University 2 A01 01 JB code 808212199 Renata Enghels Enghels, Renata Renata Enghels Ghent University 01 01 JB code slcs.158.04dvo 06 10.1075/slcs.158.04dvo 89 112 24 Article 7 01 04 Chapter 4. Case assignment, aspect, and (non-)expression of patients Chapter 4. Case assignment, aspect, and (non-)expression of patients 01 04 A study of the internal structure of Czech verbal nouns A study of the internal structure of Czech verbal nouns 1 A01 01 JB code 232212200 Věra Dvořák Dvořák, Věra Věra Dvořák Rutgers University 01 01 JB code slcs.158.05bar 06 10.1075/slcs.158.05bar 113 140 28 Article 8 01 04 Chapter 5. A data-driven analysis of the structure type `man-nature relationship' in Romanian Chapter 5. A data-driven analysis of the structure type ‘man–nature relationship’ in Romanian 1 A01 01 JB code 518212201 Ana-Maria Barbu Barbu, Ana-Maria Ana-Maria Barbu Romanian Academy, Bucharest 01 01 JB code slcs.158.06ose 06 10.1075/slcs.158.06ose 141 160 20 Article 9 01 04 Chapter 6. Classifier noun phrases of the type N1N2 in Bulgarian Chapter 6. Classifier noun phrases of the type N1N2 in Bulgarian 1 A01 01 JB code 15212202 Petya Osenova Osenova, Petya Petya Osenova Sofia University 01 01 JB code slcs.158.07res 06 10.1075/slcs.158.07res 161 182 22 Article 10 01 04 Chapter 7. Noun phrasal complements vs. adjuncts Chapter 7. Noun phrasal complements vs. adjuncts 1 A01 01 JB code 348212203 Rossella Resi Resi, Rossella Rossella Resi University of Verona 01 01 JB code slcs.158.08spe 06 10.1075/slcs.158.08spe 183 210 28 Article 11 01 04 Chapter 8. Noun valency in Latin Chapter 8. Noun valency in Latin 1 A01 01 JB code 536212204 Olga Spevak Spevak, Olga Olga Spevak University of Toulouse 2 01 01 JB code slcs.158.09ind 06 10.1075/slcs.158.09ind 211 213 3 Article 12 01 04 Index Index 01 JB code JBENJAMINS John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 01 JB code JB John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 https://benjamins.com Amsterdam NL 00 John Benjamins Publishing Company Marketing Department / Karin Plijnaar, Pieter Lamers onix@benjamins.nl 04 01 00 20140619 C 2014 John Benjamins D 2014 John Benjamins 02 WORLD 13 15 9789027259233 WORLD 03 01 JB 17 Google 03 https://play.google.com/store/books 21 01 00 Unqualified price 00 99.00 EUR 01 00 Unqualified price 00 83.00 GBP 01 00 Unqualified price 00 149.00 USD