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Besides some well-established forms like autoritär 'authoritarian'; humanitär 'humanitarian'; new coinages ending with -itär can be found in German. These adjectives are closely related to nouns ending with -ität. From an etymological point of view; these formations are morphologically transparent. Not only are the adjectives new; but -itär emerges as a new suffix.
German "-isch" and English "-ish" share a common Germanic origin, which is evidenced by striking similarities concerning the derivation of ethnic adjectives "(englisch/English)" or property-denoting adjectives "(kindisch/childish)". However, after an initial period of parallel characteristics, the two languages display drastic changes, with English developing an approximative sense when attached to adjectival bases (e.g. "greenish") and expanding to a wide range of other word categories, while German "-isch" develops multiple functions and also comes to firmly occupy a morphological niche with non-native bases. The paper sheds light on the evolving divergence between German and English by presenting results from two diachronic corpus-based studies. Additionally, explanations with respect to the typological parameter of 'Boundary Permeability' are provided.
Die vorliegende Studie setzt sich mit dem Adjektiv "neu" und seinem slowakischen Äquivalent "nový" systembezogen und pragmatisch auseinander. Wir befassen uns kontrastiv mit der Bedeutungsstruktur, mit der Kollokabilität und lexikographischen Auffassung dieser Adjektive. Um alle erwähnten Ebenen in ihrer Komplexität zu erfassen, darf man sie nicht voneinander getrennt untersuchen. Bei unserer Untersuchung gehen wir von der kodifizierten Bedeutung aus, die wir mit der realen Sprachverwendung vergleichen und ihre Anwendbarkeit an der aus den Korpora gewonnenen Daten überprüfen. Bei unserer kontrastiven Vorhegensweise ist der Ausgangspunkt die Auslegung der slowakischen Bedeutungsbeschreibung der lexikalischen Einheit "nový". Zunächst erweitert sich der Forschungsgegenstand um den Vergleich der jeweiligen Erläuterungen der deutschen lexikalischen Einheit "neu" in verschiedenen deutschen Wörterbüchern. Im Anschluss an die semantische Analyse der einzelnen Adjektive in den zwei von uns ausgewählten Sprachen überprüfen wir, ob und inwiefern bei der Bedeutungsbeschreibung der Übersetzungsäquivalente "nový" und "neu" eine analogische Auslegung verwendbar ist.
This thesis investigates the acquisition of compositional and lexical semantic properties of adjectives in German-speaking children between the age of two and five years.
According to formal semantic approaches, there are intersective and non-intersective adjectives, subsective and non-subsective adjectives as well as gradable and non-gradable adjectives. These properties concern the compositional mechanisms involved in nominal modification, i.e., the combination of adjectives and nouns. In addition, adjectives differ regarding lexical semantic properties that contribute to the adjectives' meaning. Differences in the adjectives' scale structure have led to the theoretical assumption that gradable adjectives should be distinguished into relative and absolute gradable adjectives. In addition, meaning components such as multidimensionality or subjectivity have led to the distinction between dimensional and evaluative gradable adjectives. These properties have been mostly investigated independently of each other in both theory and acquisition research. I suggest a classification system for adjectives that combines different semantic properties. This system results in six adjective classes constituting a Semantic Complexity Hierarchy. Assuming that these adjective classes differ in semantic complexity, I propose an operationalization of semantic complexity that takes into account the adjectives' length of description, their type complexity, and lexical properties that contribute to the adjectives' meaning.
Regarding the question of how monolingual German-speaking children acquire the semantics of adjectives, I hypothesize that the order of acquisition of adjectives is determined by their semantic complexity. This hypothesis is tested in a spontaneous speech study and a comprehension experiment.
The spontaneous speech study is a longitudinal investigation of the production of adjectives from 2;00 to 2;11 years based on transcripts from a dense data corpus. The results provide evidence that the mean age of acquisition for the adjective classes in the Semantic Complexity Hierarchy follows the order predicted by semantic complexity. The same order was observed for the age at which the number of types for each class increased most. A preliminary analysis of the input indicates that the frequency of parental adjective use is related to the order of acquisition, but it is unlikely that frequency determines the order completely.
The comprehension experiment focuses on two specific adjective classes. I examine children's and adults' interpretation of relative (big, small) and absolute (clean, dirty) gradable dimensional adjectives with a picture-choice task. These two classes are of the same semantic complexity because they are both gradable, but they have different scale structures. As a result, they must be interpreted differently due to lexical semantic properties. I investigate whether children calculate different standards of comparison for relative and absolute gradable adjectives and whether they distinguish between relative and absolute gradable adjectives regarding the relevance of the explicit comparison class. The results indicate that as of age 3, children distinguish between relative and absolute gradable adjectives with regard to the standard of comparison. However, with respect to the relevance of the comparison class, for 3-year-old children, unlike for 4- and 5-year-olds, changes in the noun, i.e., in the explicit comparison class, led to non-adult-like responses regarding both relative and absolute gradable adjectives.
On the basis of the empirical findings, I propose an acquisition path stating that children enter the acquisition process with inherent linguistic knowledge, the Semantic Complexity Hierarchy, and cognitive abilities to categorize their environment. I suggest that initially, children apply the least complex interpretation available in the Semantic Complexity Hierarchy to all adjectives: all adjectives are interpreted as properties of individuals that are not gradable. To access other levels of the Semantic Complexity Hierarchy and to establish more complex adjective classes, positive evidence from the input and conceptual properties of adjectives, e.g., COLOR, MENTAL STATE, PHYSICAL PROPERTY etc., can operate as triggers.
Bei der Untersuchung der bulgarischen Geschmacksadjektive werden wir versuchen, ihre distinktiven Merkmale festzustellen, die die systematischen Beziehungen zwischen den betrachteten Spracheinheiten charakterisieren. Wie bekannt, unterscheidet MELČUK zwischen äußeren und inneren distinktiven Merkmalen. Die äußeren Merkmale drücken die syntagmatischen Beziehungen der Sprachelemente aus; auf der lexikalischen Ebene z.B. müssen sie die Kombinierbarkeit – im konstruktiven Sinne – der Worte im Syntagma erklären: d.h., welche konkreten Verbindungen kann man konstruieren, abgesehen von ihrer Akzeptierbarkeit, wenn der Sinn als äußeres distinktives Merkmal ("semantischer Parameter") angegeben ist. Da diese Merkmale sehr allgemein sein müssen (im Unterschied zu den individuellen semantischen Parametern, die in wenigen Verbindungen vorkommen), ist es klar, daß nicht alle semantischen Merkmale; die ein begrenztes Gebiet. wie das der Geschmacksadjektive charakterisieren, als semantische Parameter dienen können, sondern nur das allgemeinste Merkmal. [...] Mit dem Ziel, eine semantische Interpretation der generierten Sätze zu ermöglichen, werden wir versuchen, die semantischen Merkmale in der normalen Form der lexikalischen Eintragung (nach Katz/Fodor) darzustellen, was auch die Möglichkeit gibt, einige semantische Verhältnisse der Sätze, die Geschmacksadjektive enthalten, zu erklären. Da das Ziel hier die Feststellung der für die semantische Interpretation notwendigen Merkmale ist, werden wir nicht alle Bedeutungen der Geschmacksadjektive suchen; außer Betracht bleibt auch ihr übertragener Gebrauch, weil sie dann eigentlich keine echten Geschmacksadjektive mehr sind.
The paper is structured as follows. Section 2.1 introduces the basic classes of adjectives that constitute the factual core of the paper. Section 2.2 summarizes in greater detail the X° and the XP movement approaches to word order variation within the DP. Section 3 briefly discusses problems for both approaches. Sections 4.1, 5.1, and 5.2 draw from Alexiadou (2001) and contain a discussion of Greek DS and its relevance for a re-analysis of the word order variation in the Romance DP. Section 4.2 introduces refinements to Alexiadou & Wilder (1998) and Alexiadou (2001). Section 5.3. discusses certain issues that arise from the analysis of postnominal adjectives in Romance as involving raising of XPs. Section 6 discusses phenomena found in other languages, which at first sight seem similar to DS. However, I show that double definiteness in e.g. Hebrew, Scandinavian or other Balkan languages constitutes a different type of phenomenon from Greek DS, thus making a distinction between determiners that introduce CPs (Greek) and those that are merely morphological/agreement markers (Hebrew, Scandinavian, Albanian).
This paper deals with the variable position of adjectives in the Romanian DP. As all other Romance languages, Romanian allows for adjectives to appear in both prenominal and post-nominal position. In addition, however, Romanian has a third pattern: the so-called cel construction, in which the adjective in the post-nominal position is preceded by a determiner-like element, cel. This pattern is superficially similar to Determiner Spreading in Greek. In this paper we contrast the cel construction to Greek DS and discuss the similarities and differences between the two. We then present an analysis of cel as involving an appositive specification clause, building on de Vries (2002). We argue that the same structure is also involved in the context of nominal ellipsis, the second environment in which cel is found.