Description

Book Synopsis

This volume presents research into the syntax and semantics of English deverbal compound adjectives based on the passive and active participles, e.g. pencil-drawn, action-packed, risk-taking, time-consuming. The study, couched in the current Distributed Morphology framework, uses rich linguistic data to investigate the syntactic behaviour of English participial compounds, in particular their ability to occur in typically adjectival and verbal contexts. The main claim of this work is that the verbal syntactic layers are not universally projected in the internal structure of adjectival synthetic compounds, the most important consequence of which is that linguistic formations derived from lexical verbs, even in combination with their arguments, need not be deverbal in the morphosyntactic sense.



Table of Contents

Word formation in Distributed Morphology – Argument structure in deverbal adjectives – The syntax of English synthetic compounds based on the passive participle – The syntax of English synthetic compounds based on the active participle – Inner and outer cycle derivation

The Syntax of Deverbal Compound Adjectives in

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    A Hardback by Sebastian Wasak

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      Publisher: Peter Lang AG
      Publication Date: 12/03/2021
      ISBN13: 9783631845950, 978-3631845950
      ISBN10: 3631845952

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This volume presents research into the syntax and semantics of English deverbal compound adjectives based on the passive and active participles, e.g. pencil-drawn, action-packed, risk-taking, time-consuming. The study, couched in the current Distributed Morphology framework, uses rich linguistic data to investigate the syntactic behaviour of English participial compounds, in particular their ability to occur in typically adjectival and verbal contexts. The main claim of this work is that the verbal syntactic layers are not universally projected in the internal structure of adjectival synthetic compounds, the most important consequence of which is that linguistic formations derived from lexical verbs, even in combination with their arguments, need not be deverbal in the morphosyntactic sense.



      Table of Contents

      Word formation in Distributed Morphology – Argument structure in deverbal adjectives – The syntax of English synthetic compounds based on the passive participle – The syntax of English synthetic compounds based on the active participle – Inner and outer cycle derivation

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