000 02591nam a22003495i 4500
001 11241
003 MEMOS
005 20240731094747.0
008 191023s2020 nyu 000 0 eng
010 _a 2019953284
020 _a9780198855781
_q(hardback)
040 _aMEMOS
_beng
_erda
_cDLC
_dMEMOS
042 _apcc
082 _223
_a425
_bB386
100 1 _aBeavers, John,
_eauthor.
245 1 4 _aThe roots of verbal meaning /
_cJohn Beavers, Andrew Koontz-Garboden.
250 _a
260 _aUK:
_bOxford University Press,
_c2020.
263 _a2003
264 1 _a
_b
_c
300 _a255 P.
336 _atext
_btxt
_2rdacontent
337 _aunmediated
_bn
_2rdamedia
338 _avolume
_bnc
_2rdacarrier
490 0 _aOstl:c
520 _a"This book explores possible and impossible word meanings, with a specific focus on the meanings of verbs. It adopts the now common view that verb meanings consist at least partly of an event structure, made up of an event template describing the verb's broad temporal and causal contours that occurs across lots of verbs and groups them into semantic and grammatical classes, plus an idiosyncratic root describing specific, real world states and actions that distinguish verbs with the same template. While much work has focused on templates, less work has addressed the truth conditional contributions of roots, despite the importance of a theory of root meaning in fully defining the predictions event structural approaches make. This book addresses this lacuna, exploring two previously proposed constraints on root meaning: The Bifurcation Thesis of Roots, whereby roots never introduce the meanings introduced by templates, and Manner/Result Complementarity, which has as a component that roots can describe either a manner or a result state but never both at the same time. Two extended case studies, on change-of-state verbs and ditransitive verbs of caused possession, show that neither hypothesis holds, and that ultimately there may be no constraints on what a root can mean. Nonetheless, the book argues that event structures still have predictive value, and it presents a new theory of possible root meanings and how they interact with event templates that produces a new typology of possible verbs, albeit one where not just templates but also roots determine systematic semantic and grammatical properties"--
_cProvided by publisher.
650 _aGrammar,comparative
_vgeneral
_xVerb
700 1 _aKoontz-Garboden, Andrew,
_eauthor.
906 _a42267
_b
942 _2ddc
_cBK
_n0
999 _c13496
_d13496