Generative semantics
Table of contents
The term ‘generative semantics’ (GS) is an informal designation for the school of syntactic, semantic, and pragmatic research that was prominent from the late 1960s through the mid-1970s and whose best-known practitioners were George Lakoff, James D. McCawley, Paul M. Postal, and John Robert Ross.
References
Bach, E.
Bach, E. & R.T. Harms
Cole, P. & J.L. Morgan
Davidson, D. & G. Harman
Fodor, J.A.
Forman, D.
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Horn, L.R.
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1972 Some aspects of the syntax and semantics of interjections. Papers from the 8th regional meeting of the Chicago Linguistic Society: 162–172. BoP
1973 Another look at, say, some grammatical constraints on, oh, interjections and hesitations. Papers from the 9th regional meeting of the Chicago Linguistic Society: 42–51. BoP
1970 Presupposition and relative well-formedness. In D. Steinberg & L. Jakobovits (eds.) Semantics: 329–340. Cambridge University Press. BoP
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