In:Lexicalising Clausal Syntax: The interaction of syntax, the lexicon and information structure in Hungarian
Tibor Laczkó
[Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 354] 2021
► pp. 99–172
Chapter 3Verbal modifiers
Published online: 18 November 2021
https://doi.org/10.1075/cilt.354.c3
https://doi.org/10.1075/cilt.354.c3
Article outline
- 3.1On particle-verb constructions
- 3.1.1GB and MP treatments of PVCs
- 3.1.2Lexicalist treatments of PVCs
- 3.1.2.1Lexicalist approaches to complex predicates
- 3.1.2.2Generative Argument Structure grammar on Hungarian vms
- 3.1.2.3Head-Driven Phrase Structure Grammar on Hungarian vms
- 3.1.2.4Realisation-Based Lexicalism on Hungarian vms
- 3.1.3On some LFG(-compatible) views of PVCs
- 3.1.4Previous LFG-XLE treatments of Hungarian PVCs
- 3.1.4.1Forst et al. (2010) on PVCs in English, German and Hungarian
- 3.1.4.2A HunGram account of four Hungarian PVCs
- 3.1.5My alternative LFG-XLE analysis of PVCs
- 3.1.5.1A possible lexical treatment of PVCs in an XLE grammar
- 3.1.5.2On the choice between the syntactic and the lexical
accounts
- 3.1.5.2.1Causativisation
- 3.1.5.2.2Nominalisation of PVCs
- 3.1.5.2.3Preverb reduplication
- 3.1.5.3Interim conclusion
- 3.2A general approach to verbal modifiers
- 3.2.1Major vm types
- 3.2.2Towards a comprehensive LFG analysis of vms
- 3.2.2.1Preverbs
- 3.2.2.2Reduced arguments
- 3.2.2.3Oblique arguments
- 3.2.2.4Small clause xcomps
- 3.2.2.5Idiom chunks
- 3.3Conclusion
- 3.3.1General remarks
- 3.3.2Implementational issues
Notes
