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The Oxford Handbook of Linguistic Interfaces

Online ISBN:
9780191743856
Print ISBN:
9780199247455
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Book

The Oxford Handbook of Linguistic Interfaces

Gillian Ramchand (ed.),
Gillian Ramchand
(ed.)
Linguistics, University of Tromso
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Gillian Ramchand is Professor of Linguistics at UiT The Arctic University of Norway, where she has worked since 2004, after being University Lecturer in General Linguistics at Oxford University for ten years. She received her PhD in Linguistics from Stanford University in 1993, and holds BScs in Mathematics and in Philosophy from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1998). Her research work lies at the interface of syntax and formal semantics, primarily in the domain of verbal meaning. Her language interests include English, Scottish Gaelic, Bengali, and the Scandinavian languages.

Charles Reiss (ed.)
Charles Reiss
(ed.)
Linguistics, Concordia University
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Charles Reiss teaches in the Linguistics Program at Concordia University in Montreal. He is coauthor of The Phonological Enterprise (OUP, 2008, with Mark Hale) and I-language: An Introduction to Linguistics as Cognitive Science (OUP, 2008/2013, with Daniela Isac). He is currently working on basic logic in phonology.

Published online:
18 September 2012
Published in print:
22 February 2007
Online ISBN:
9780191743856
Print ISBN:
9780199247455
Publisher:
Oxford University Press

Abstract

The Oxford Handbook of Linguistic Interfaces explores how the core components of the language faculty interact. It examines how these interactions are reflected in linguistic and cognitive theory, considers what they reveal about the operations of language within the mind, and looks at their reflections in expression and communication. International scholars present accounts of developments in the interfaces between phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, and pragmatics. They bring to bear a rich variety of methods and theoretical perspectives, focus on a broad array of issues and problems, and illustrate their arguments from a wide range of the world's languages. After the editors' introduction to its structure, scope, and content, the book is divided into four parts. The first, Sound, is concerned with the interfaces between phonetics and phonology, phonology and morphology, and phonology and syntax. Part II, Structure, considers the interactions of syntax with morphology, semantics, and the lexicon, and explores the status of the word and its representational status in the mind. Part III, Meaning, revisits the syntax–semantics interface from the perspective of compositionality, and looks at issues concerned with intonation, discourse, and context. In the final part of the book, General Architectural Concerns, the authors examine work on Universal Grammar, the overall model of language, and linguistic and associated theories of language and cognition.

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