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THE SURFACE-COMPOSITIONAL SEMANTICS OF ENGLISH INTONATION
by
Steedman, Mark
in
Categorial Grammar
/ Compositionality
/ Derivation
/ Derivation (Syntax)
/ Descriptive studies and applied theories
/ English
/ English language
/ Focus
/ Grammar
/ Information Structure
/ Intonation
/ Language
/ Languages
/ Linguistics
/ Logic
/ Logical form
/ Rheme
/ Semantics
/ Semantics and pragmatics
/ Semantics Phonology Relationship
/ Speech
/ Surface structure
/ Syntactic structures
/ Syntax
/ Syntax Phonology Relationship
/ Syntax semantics relationship
/ Topic and comment
2014
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THE SURFACE-COMPOSITIONAL SEMANTICS OF ENGLISH INTONATION
by
Steedman, Mark
in
Categorial Grammar
/ Compositionality
/ Derivation
/ Derivation (Syntax)
/ Descriptive studies and applied theories
/ English
/ English language
/ Focus
/ Grammar
/ Information Structure
/ Intonation
/ Language
/ Languages
/ Linguistics
/ Logic
/ Logical form
/ Rheme
/ Semantics
/ Semantics and pragmatics
/ Semantics Phonology Relationship
/ Speech
/ Surface structure
/ Syntactic structures
/ Syntax
/ Syntax Phonology Relationship
/ Syntax semantics relationship
/ Topic and comment
2014
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Do you wish to request the book?
THE SURFACE-COMPOSITIONAL SEMANTICS OF ENGLISH INTONATION
by
Steedman, Mark
in
Categorial Grammar
/ Compositionality
/ Derivation
/ Derivation (Syntax)
/ Descriptive studies and applied theories
/ English
/ English language
/ Focus
/ Grammar
/ Information Structure
/ Intonation
/ Language
/ Languages
/ Linguistics
/ Logic
/ Logical form
/ Rheme
/ Semantics
/ Semantics and pragmatics
/ Semantics Phonology Relationship
/ Speech
/ Surface structure
/ Syntactic structures
/ Syntax
/ Syntax Phonology Relationship
/ Syntax semantics relationship
/ Topic and comment
2014
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Journal Article
THE SURFACE-COMPOSITIONAL SEMANTICS OF ENGLISH INTONATION
2014
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Overview
This article proposes a syntax and a semantics for intonation in English and some related languages. The semantics is 'surface-compositional', in the sense that syntactic derivation constructs information-structural logical form monotonically, without rules of structural revision, and without autonomous rules of 'focus projection'. This is made possible by the generalized notion of syntactic constituency afforded by combinatory categorial grammar (CCG)—in particular, the fact that its rules are restricted to string-adjacent type-driven combination. In this way, the grammar unites intonation structure and information structure with surface-syntactic derivational structure and Montague-style compositional semantics, even when they deviate radically from traditional surface structure. The article revises and extends earlier CCG-based accounts of intonational semantics, grounding hitherto informal notions like 'theme' and 'rheme' (a.k.a. 'topic' and 'comment', 'presupposition' and 'focus', etc.) and 'background' and 'contrast' (a.k.a. 'given' and 'new', 'focus', etc.) in a logic of speaker/hearer supposition and update, using a version of Rooth's alternative semantics. A CCG grammar fragment is defined that constrains language-specific intonation and its interpretation more narrowly than previous attempts.
Publisher
THE LINGUISTIC SOCIETY OF AMERICA,Linguistic Society of America
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