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  • Published: 17 May 2022
  • ISBN: 9780262543491
  • Imprint: MIT Press Academic
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 256
  • RRP: $100.00
Categories:

Syntax in the Treetops



A proposal that syntax extends to the domain of discourse in making core syntax link to the conversational context.

A proposal that syntax extends to the domain of discourse in making core syntax link to the conversational context.

In Syntax in the Treetops, Shigeru Miyagawa proposes that syntax extends into the domain of discourse by making linkages between core syntax and the conversational participants. Miyagawa draws on evidence for this extended syntactic structure from a wide variety of languages, including Basque, Japanese, Italian, Magahi, Newari, Romanian, and Spanish, as well as the language of children with autism. His proposal for what happens at the highest level of the tree structure used by linguists to represent the hierarchical relationships within sentences—“in the treetops”—offers a unique contribution to the new area of study sometimes known as “syntacticization of discourse.”
 
Miyagawa’s main point is that syntax provides the basic framework that makes possible the performance of a speech act and the conveyance of meaning; although the role that syntax plays for speech acts is modest, it is critical. He proposes that the speaker-addressee layer and the Commitment Phrase (the speaker’s commitment to the addressee of the truthfulness of the proposition) occur together in the syntactic treetops. In each succeeding chapter, Miyagawa examines the working of each layer of the tree and how they interact.
 

  • Published: 17 May 2022
  • ISBN: 9780262543491
  • Imprint: MIT Press Academic
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 256
  • RRP: $100.00
Categories:

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Praise for Syntax in the Treetops

"The author has...presented a novel contextualization in the introduction and conclusion that provide evidence for a far-ranging proposal with depth and breadth and a clear connection to longstanding questions in linguistic theory, now couched in terms of very specific syntactic structure." - Andrew Nevins, Professor of Linguistics, University College London

"Miyagawa goes straight to the heart of the crucial questions of linguistics: how are natural human languages the same, and in what ways can they be different? To see how he compares and substantially unifies the syntax of case-marking, head-final languages like Japanese, with agreement-rich, head-initial languages, like English and Bantu informs this powerful book. It is rare to see this even attempted with such sophistication, much less achieved. I learned a lot." - Mark Baker, Department of Linguistics, Rutgers University