Home    New Authors    New Books    Coming Soon    Most Popular    Top Authors
<< Previous bookNext book >>
book cover of 

Predication Theory 

a Case Study for Indexing Theory 

by

Donna Jo NapoliPredication Theory (1989)
a Case Study for Indexing Theory
A non fiction book by Donna Jo Napoli

 
Napoli's study takes a refreshing look at the notions of argument and predicate. Recent discussions of predication with Government and Binding theory stress the configurational properties of the phrases involved, and Napoli argues that this has led to proposals for more and more elaborate syntactic structures that still fail to give genuinely explanatory accounts. She presents a convincing case for the idea of predicate as a semantic primitive that cannot be defined simply by looking at the lexicon or simply at semantic structure, and offers a theory of predication where the key to the subject-predicate relationship is theta role assignment. Napoli then offers principles for the coindexing of a predicate with its subject role player. The coindexing principles use Chomsky's 1986 notion of barriers, but this study argues that binding is sensitive to thematic structure rather than to configurational notions such as Government and C-Command. Napoli's approach successfully handles the data traditionally considered in discussions of predication, as well as constructions that are not generally treated in the literature. Although exemplification is from English and Italian, the conclusions apply to all configurational languages.

 
Used availability for Donna Jo Napoli's Predication Theory


See all available used copies of this book at: Abebooks UK or Abebooks US
 

 

Paperback Editions

May 1989 : Paperback
Cover of ISBN: 0521368200Title: Predication Theory: A Case Study for Indexing Theory (Cambridge Studies in Linguistics)
Author(s): Donna Jo Napoli
ISBN: 0-521-36820-0 / 978-0-521-36820-9 (UK edition)
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Availability: Amazon   Amazon UK   Amazon CA   
More details...

 


Search for    

© 2012 FantasticFiction
Questions? Comments? Corrections? Please email webmaster@fantasticfiction.co.uk