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Regularity and idiosyncracy in the formation of nominals

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 March 2018

FRANK VAN EYNDE*
Affiliation:
Department of Linguistics – KU Leuven
*
Author’s address: Department of Linguistics – KU Leuven, Blijde Inkomststraat 13 – Box 3315, 3000 Leuven, Belgium[email protected]

Abstract

This paper explores the interaction of regularity and idiosyncracy in the formation of nominals. It treats both nominals whose formation is highly regular, such as red box, and nominals whose formation is rather idiosyncratic, such as the Big Mess Construction (bmc; so good a bargain) and the Binominal Noun Phrase Construction (bnpc; her nitwit of a husband). Both the bmc and the bnpc conform to productive patterns, but the proper place of those patterns in the grammar as a whole is not easy to identify. To rise to the challenge, we build on recent developments in Head-driven Phrase Structure Grammar and the more formally inclined strands of Construction Grammar. Taking a cue from the treatment of clausal constructions in Ginzburg & Sag (2000), we develop a bi-dimensional hierarchy of nominal phrase types, in which the regular nominals inherit their properties from independently motivated higher types, while the idiosyncratic nominals are characterized by a mixture of inherited and inherent properties. The resulting treatment is sufficiently flexible to deal with the subtle interaction between the regular and the idiosyncratic, and sufficiently rigorous to be falsifiable. It is also compared with alternative treatments.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2018 

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Footnotes

[1]

Thanks are due to the editor and the anonymous Journal of Linguistics referees, as well as to the audiences of the third European workshop on Head-driven Phrase Structure Grammar (Frankfurt, November 2015) and the HeadLex Conference (Warsaw, July 2016), where parts of the content of this paper were presented. I am also grateful to my colleagues of the research group on formal and computational linguistics at the University of Leuven, where a previous version of this text was discussed.

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