mirror of https://git.door43.org/Andley/BG4e
6.9 KiB
6.9 KiB
Preliminaries
0. Introduction: The approach of this grammar
0.1 The intended audience
0.1.1 Translators
0.1.2 Linguists
0.2 Greek grammars & linguistic adequacy
0.3 The theoretical perspective
0.3.1 Cognitive
0.3.1.1 The rejection of classical categories
0.3.1.2 Language and the embodied mind
0.3.1.3 Prototypes & gestalts
0.3.1.4 Emergence & complex systems
0.3.2 Functional
0.3.2.1 Motivated syntax
0.3.2.2 Iconicity in form and function
0.3.3 Descriptive
0.3.3.1 Sources of data
0.3.3.2 Methodology for analysis
0.4 Conclusion & summary
Part I: Parts-of-speech and morphosyntax
1. Verbal inflectional categories
1.1 Valance & Valency alternating morphology
1.1.1 Transitivity and embodiment
1.1.2 Prototypical transitive events
1.1.3 Event energy source
1.1.4 Event energy direction
1.1.5 Notes on activa tantum and media tantum verbs
1.2 Aspect
1.2.1 Perfective
1.2.2 Imperfective
1.2.3 Completive-resultative
1.3 Tense
1.3.1 Past
1.3.2 Non-past
1.3.3 Future
1.4 Mood/modality
1.4.1 Indicative: The unmarked/default mood
1.4.2 Subjunctive: Epistemic modality
1.4.3 Optative: Remote epistemic modality
1.4.4 Imperative: Deontic modality & illocutionary force
1.4.5 Exhortatives: interlocutors & participant reference
1.5 Subject agreement
1.5.1 Person
1.5.2 Number
2. Inflectional morphology of the verb
3. Auxiliary verbs
3.1 Types of auxiliaries
3.2 Periphrasis
3.3 Auxiliaries and participles
4. Verbal derivational morphology
4.1 Infinitive
4.2 Participle
4.3 Compounding & similar processes
4.3.1 Pre-verb attachment/directionals
4.3.2 Compounding
4.3.3 Noun incorporation
5. Nominal inflectional categories
5.1 Gender
5.1.1 Gender as noun class
5.1.2 Masculine
5.1.3 Feminine
5.1.4 Neuter
5.1.5 Gender in nouns
5.1.6 Gender agreement & co-indexing
5.2 Number
5.2.1 Singular
5.2.2 Plural
5.2.3 Dual*
6. Inflectional Morphology of the Noun
7. Inflectional Morphology of the Adjective
7.1 Adjective inflection classes and iconicity
7.2 Formal relationships among adjective classes
8. Inflectional morphology of quantifiers
9. Other derivational morphology
9.1 Nominalization
9.2 Modifier derivation
10. Referential & deictic system
10.1 Interlocutives
10.1.1 Personal pronouns
10.1.2 Possessive pronouns
10.1.3 Reflexive pronouns
10.2 Non-interlocutives
10.2.1 Definite
10.2.1.1 Substitutive
10.2.1.1.1 Personal
10.2.1.1.2 Demonstrative
10.2.1.2 Non-substitutive
10.2.2 Non-definite
10.2.2.1 Indefinite
10.2.2.2 Interrogative
10.2.3 Relative
10.2.4 Correlative
11. Prepositions
12. Other lexical classes
12.1 Adverbs
12.2 Negators
12.3 Connectives
12.4 Interjectives
Part II: Syntax, semantics, & discourse
1. An overview of syntax & semantics
1.1 The layered structure of the clause
1.1.1 The nucleus, core, and clause
1.1.2 Verbal and non-verbal predicates
1.1.3 Arguments & Adjuncts
1.1.4 Special syntactic positions
1.1.5 Operators
1.2 Predicate-types
1.2.1 States
1.2.2 Activities & active achievements
1.2.3 Achievements
1.2.4 Accomplishment
1.2.5 Semelfactives
1.2.6 Causatives
1.3 Sentence Prosody: Prominence and Pauses
1.4 Information Packaging in the Clause
1.5 Conclusion: A construction-driven approach
2. The simplex clause
2.1 Default clause structure
2.1.1 Natural information flow & information structure
2.1.2 Constituent order & prosody within the core
2.1.3 Declaratives
2.1.4 Content Questions
2.1.5 Yes/No Questions
2.1.6 Commands and prohibitions
2.2 Marked clause structures
2.2.1 Prosody, constituent order & the pre-core slot
2.2.2 Prosody, constituent order & the detached positions
2.2.3 Marked topic constructions
2.2.4 Marked focus constructions
2.3 Other constructions
2.3.1 Noun incorporation and other ditransitive constructions
2.3.2 Predicate types of clause constructions
2.3.3 Constructions involving operators in the clause
3. The simple reference phrase (i.e. the noun phrase)
3.1 Major functions of the reference phrase
3.2 Basic noun phrase structure
3.2.1 Constituent structure
3.2.1.1 Layered Structure of the noun phrase
3.2.1.2 NP Arguments
3.2.1.3 NP Adjuncts
3.2.2 Noun phrase operators
3.2.2.1 Deixis
3.2.2.2 Identifiability
3.2.2.3 Specificity
3.2.2.4 Negation
3.2.2.5 Quantification
3.2.2.6 Aspect
3.3 Noun phrases and information structure
3.4 Lexical Nominalization
3.4.1 Processes for forming nouns from lexical verbs
3.4.2 Syntactic collocation
3.4.2.1 Assimilation of arguments to NP syntax
3.4.2.2 Unexpressed arguments
4. Prepositional phrases
5. An introduction to complex constructions
6. Coordinate constructions
6.1 The semantics of connectives
6.2 The structure of coordination
6.3 Postpositives