For Aristotle, language is (A) a symbolic system that represents (B) the world of our experience as it is contained within the mind. He believed (C) that the world is external to …
J Bybee - Chicago Linguistic Society, 1998 - unm.edu
In the traditional view, the lexicon is a storage area for all and only the content words or morphemes of a language. The lexicon is relatively static compared to the grammar, which …
Publications in Language Sciences is a series of monographs in theoretical linguistics and its more formal satellite fields of scientific inquiry. It is intended to provide an opportunity for …
F ew divisions appear to be more fundamental than that between grammar and lexicon. It is firmly rooted in convention and, at the same time, it is accepted as a safe and reliable …
M Gross - Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics, 1994 - shs.hal.science
Lexicon-grammar is a model of syntax limited to the elementary sentences of a natural language. We present its main theoretical features, mostly inferred from large-scale …
Abstract Aristotle begins On Interpretation with an analysis of the existence of linguistic entities as both physical and meaningful. Two things have been lacking for a full …
MR Baumer - Journal of Philosophical Research, 1993 - pdcnet.org
This paper addresses the problem of the origin and principle of Aristotle's distinctions among the categories. It explores the possibilities of reformulating and reviving the “grammatical” …
An original study of both structural entitiesoriginating in the lexicon, and the structural characteristics of thelexicon as a module of formal grammar, this book makes two …
In this paper, I am charged with discussing the relation between lexicon and grammar. This might be interpreted as meaning either of two similar but not identical problems: the relation …