Refine
Year of publication
- 2011 (963) (remove)
Document Type
- Article (422)
- Part of Periodical (132)
- Book (109)
- Conference Proceeding (82)
- Doctoral Thesis (82)
- Working Paper (68)
- Part of a Book (39)
- Report (10)
- Review (10)
- Periodical (3)
Language
- English (963) (remove)
Keywords
- Dante Alighieri (20)
- Rezeption (20)
- Productive reception (18)
- new species (12)
- Englisch (11)
- Cape Verde Islands (9)
- Divina Commedia (9)
- Inferno (7)
- Intonation <Linguistik> (7)
- Interrogativsatz (6)
Institute
- Medizin (130)
- Physik (80)
- Biochemie und Chemie (63)
- Geowissenschaften (45)
- Biowissenschaften (44)
- Extern (44)
- Center for Financial Studies (CFS) (42)
- Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies (FIAS) (36)
- Institut für Ökologie, Evolution und Diversität (27)
- Wirtschaftswissenschaften (25)
The article discusses the methodology adopted for a cross-linguistic synchronic and diachronic corpus study on indefinites. The study covered five indefinite expressions, each in a different language. The main goal of the study was to verify the distribution of these indefinites synchronically and to attest their historical development. The methodology we used is a form of functional labeling which combines both context (syntax) and meaning (semantics) using as a starting point Haspelmath’s (1997) functional map. In the article we identify Haspelmath’s functions with logico-semantic interpretations and propose a binary branching decision tree assigning each instance of an indefinite exactly one function in the map.
The papers in this volume were originally presented at the Workshop on Bantu Wh-questions, held at the Institut des Sciences de l’Homme, Université Lyon 2, on 25-26 March 2011, which was organized by the French-German cooperative project on the Phonology/Syntax Interface in Bantu Languages (BANTU PSYN). This project, which is funded by the ANR and the DFG, comprises three research teams, based in Berlin, Paris and Lyon. The Berlin team, at the ZAS, is: Laura Downing (project leader) and Kristina Riedel (post-doc). The Paris team, at the Laboratoire de phonétique et phonologie (LPP; UMR 7018), is: Annie Rialland (project leader), Cédric Patin (Maître de Conférences, STL, Université Lille 3), Jean-Marc Beltzung (post-doc), Martial Embanga Aborobongui (doctoral student), Fatima Hamlaoui (post-doc). The Lyon team, at the Dynamique du Langage (UMR 5596) is: Gérard Philippson (project leader) and Sophie Manus (Maître de Conférences, Université Lyon 2). These three research teams bring together the range of theoretical expertise necessary to investigate the phonology-syntax interface: intonation (Patin, Rialland), tonal phonology (Aborobongui, Downing, Manus, Patin, Philippson, Rialland), phonology-syntax interface (Downing, Patin) and formal syntax (Riedel, Hamlaoui). They also bring together a range of Bantu language expertise: Western Bantu (Aboronbongui, Rialland), Eastern Bantu (Manus, Patin, Philippson, Riedel), and Southern Bantu (Downing).