A New Architecture for Functional Grammar (Functional Grammar Series)
Process and pattern interpretations 167 A minimalistic functionalism? The question remaining, then, is whether the two perspec ...
168 Michael Fortescue (Chomsky 1993). Having shaken off the ‘superfluous’ baggage of transfor- mations and the deep-versus-surfa ...
Process and pattern interpretations 169 comes out in the wash’ in the expression rules anyway, as long as the rele- vant functio ...
170 Michael Fortescue are talking about something else. This does not preclude eventually elabo- rating a single model that can ...
Process and pattern interpretations 171 represented as operators on the level of the illocution, whose effect perco- lates throu ...
172 Michael Fortescue which the second predicate shares any clausal mood marking of the preced- ing one. Nakayama prefers not to ...
Process and pattern interpretations 173 constructions (like Chinese and Japanese) seem to fall somewhere between English and Noo ...
174 Michael Fortescue tial choices in Japanese watashi wa kono hoo ga ii ‘I like this one’, in which watashi, which corresponds ...
Process and pattern interpretations 175 from language to language than we often imagine. The reason Nootka ap- pears to be close ...
176 Michael Fortescue ple, a left-to-right elaboration of an interpersonal level structure would re- quire very little reference ...
Process and pattern interpretations 177 1998 Language Relations Across the Bering Strait. London and New York: Cassell. 2001 Pat ...
178 Michael Fortescue 1998 The basis of syntax in the holophrase. In: Mike Hannay and A. Machtelt Bolkestein (eds), 267–295. Mit ...
Functional Discourse Grammar and language production J. Lachlan Mackenzie Introduction One of the central requirements placed ...
180 J. Lachlan Mackenzie (c) or one can claim that the processor embodies the grammar, i.e. that grammar is itself procedural. I ...
FDG and language production 181 else being equal, conforms with LIPOC. Note that there is nothing anti- functional about this un ...
182 J. Lachlan Mackenzie ing a model of clause production. He nevertheless refers to it as a grammar, not least because the proc ...
FDG and language production 183 on their own. Nothing could be further from the truth”. Dik (1997a: 8) similarly stresses that w ...
184 J. Lachlan Mackenzie the succession of cognitive events: shock; perception; identification. Using, but adapting, Hengeveld’s ...
FDG and language production 185 complex forms that mimic the complexity of lexical formulations (techni- cally speaking, to be m ...
186 J. Lachlan Mackenzie appropriate circumstances, determined by such matters as urgency, or fa- miliarity between the interloc ...
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