* For a fuller bibliography of James McCawley’s writing, see pages 262–264 (below). Ed.
Bach, Emmon & Robert Harms
eds.1968Universals in Linguistic Theory. New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston.
Brentari, Diane, Gary N. Larson & Lynn A. MacLeod
eds.1992The Joy of Grammar: A Festschrift in honor of James D. McCawley. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
Chomsky, Noam & Morris Halle
1968The Sound Pattern of English. New York & London: Harper & Row.
McCawley, James D.
1970a “A Note on Tone in Tiv Conjugation”. Studies in African Linguistics 1.123–130.*
McCawley, James D.
1970b “Some Tonal Systems that Come Close to Being Pitch Accent Systems but Don’t Quite Make It”. Papers from the 6th Regional Meeting of the Chicago Linguistic Society, 526–532. Chicago: Chicago Linguistic Society.
McCawley, James D.
1973a “Tone in Tonga”. A Festschrift for Morris Halle ed. by Stephen R. Anderson & Paul Kiparsky, 140–152. New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston.
McCawley, James D.
1973b “Global Rules and Bangubangu Tone”. Issues in Phonological Theory ed. by Michael Kenstowicz & Charles Kisseberth, 160–168. The Hague: Mouton.
McCawley, James D.
1978a “What is a Tone Language?”. Tone: A linguistic survey ed. by Victoria A. Fromkin, 113–131. New York: Academic Press.
McCawley, James D.
1978b “Conversational Implicature and the Lexicon”. Pragmatics ed. by Peter Cole (= Syntax and Semantics, 9), 245–259. New York: Academic Press.
McCawley, James D.
1981Everything Linguists Always Wanted to Kknow about Logic (But Were Ashamed to Ask). Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
McCawley, James D.
1988The Syntactic Phenomena of English. 2 vols. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. (2nd rev. ed. in one volume 1998.)
Zwicky, Arnold M., Peter H. Salus, Robert I. Binnick & Anthony L. Vanek