
Contents
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1. What Is a Mental Representation? 1. What Is a Mental Representation?
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2. Three Models of Linguistic Rules 2. Three Models of Linguistic Rules
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3. Words and Rules Belong in the Same Bucket 3. Words and Rules Belong in the Same Bucket
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4. Full and Partial Productivity 4. Full and Partial Productivity
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5. Dual Route—But Where? 5. Dual Route—But Where?
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6. Aren’t Morphology and Syntax Different? 6. Aren’t Morphology and Syntax Different?
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7. Learning Partially and Fully Productive Schemas 7. Learning Partially and Fully Productive Schemas
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8. Ending 8. Ending
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Acknowledgments Acknowledgments
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Works Cited Works Cited
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4.2 Reflections on Ray Jackendoff 4.2 Reflections on Ray Jackendoff
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Works Cited Works Cited
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4.1 Representations and Rules in Language
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Published:February 2018
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Abstract
In both traditional grammar and cognitive science, the standard view of language distinguishes sharply between words (lexicon) and rules (grammar). Here I undermine this distinction, presenting a continuum of phenomena that lie between undisputed words like cat and undisputed “rules” such as the pattern for transitive verb phrases. Mainstream linguistics makes a further distinction between productive rules “in the grammar,” such as the regular English past tense, and partially productive rules “in the lexicon,” such as forming a noun like construction by affixing –tion to a verb. I show that this distinction too has been misconceived: productive rules have all the properties of partially productive rules, but have in addition “gone viral.” These phenomena argue that rules of grammar are declarative schemas for licensing well-formed sentences, rather than either procedures for assembling sentences, as in mainstream generative grammar, or simple association and analogy, as in connectionist and exemplar-based approaches.
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