This 1999 textbook investigates definiteness both from a comparative and a theoretical point of view, showing how languages express definiteness and what definiteness is. It surveys a large number of languages to discover the range of variation in relation to definiteness and related grammatical phenomena, such as demonstratives, possessives and personal pronouns. It outlines work done on the nature of definiteness in semantics, pragmatics and syntax, and develops an account on which definiteness is a grammatical category represented in syntax as a functional head (the widely discussed D). Consideration is also given to the origins and evolution of definite articles in the light of the comparative and theoretical findings. Among the claims advanced are that definiteness does not occur in all languages, though the pragmatic concept which it grammaticalizes probably does.
Beast is dangerous, a monster.He tried to kill my best friend.I should hate him.I should want to see him rot in prison.But he's also handsome, mysterious, and the sex is out of this world.Despite my...
The answer to the question "How can we understand and use a definition?" provides new constraints on natural language and on the internal language in which meaning is mentally represented. Most...
Part 1: Getting Started. 1. Setting Up DEFINITE. 2. Tutorial. Part 2: Reference Manual 3. Procedures of the Main Menu and Utilities. 4. Problem Definition Procedures. 5. Problem Presentation...
One question from an ex-lover.One text message from a complete stranger.The same answer to both...Yes.Scarlett Bell has found a way to move beyond a dark past that threatened to take her best friend,...