rapaport@cs.Buffalo.EDU (William J. Rapaport) (10/25/88)
UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK DEPARTMENT OF LINGUISTICS GRADUATE GROUP IN COGNITIVE SCIENCE and GRADUATE RESEARCH INITIATIVE IN COGNITIVE AND LINGUISTIC SCIENCES PRESENT ARNOLD ZWICKY Department of Linguistics, Ohio State University Department of Linguistics, Stanford University 1. TOWARDS A THEORY OF SYNTACTIC CONSTRUCTIONS The past decade has seen the vigorous development of frameworks for syn- tactic description that not only are fully explicit (to the point of being easily modeled in computer programs) but also are integrated with an equally explicit framework for semantic description (and, sometimes, with equally explicit frameworks for morphological and phonological description). This has made it possible to reconsider the _construc- tion_ as a central concept in syntax. Constructions are, like words, Saussurean signs--linkages of linguistic form with meanings and pragmatic values. The technical problem is to develop the appropriate logics for the interactions between construc- tions, both with respect to their form and with respect to their interpretation. I am concerned here primarily with the formal side of the matter, which turns out to be rather more intricate than one might have expected. Constructions are complexes of categories, sub- categories, grammatical relations, conditions on governed features, con- ditions on agreeing features, conditions on phonological shape, condi- tions on branching, conditions on ordering, _and_ specific contributory constructions (so that, for example, the subject-auxiliary construction in English contributes to several others, including the information question construction, as in `What might you have seen?'). The schemes of formal interaction I will illustrate are overlapping, or mutual applicability; superimposition, or invocation; and preclusion, or over- riding of defaults. Thursday, November 3, 1988 5:00 P.M. Baldy 684, Amherst Campus There will be an evening discussion on Nov. 3, 8:00 P.M., at the home of Joan Bybee, 38 Endicott, Eggertsville. ========================================================================= 2. INFLECTIONAL MORPHOLOGY AS A (SUB)COMPONENT OF GRAMMAR Friday, November 4, 1988 3:00 P.M. Baldy 684, Amherst Campus Wine and cheese to follow. Call Donna Gerdts (Dept. of Linguistics, 636-2177) for further information.