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The Structure of Modern Irish

A Functional Account

Brian Nolan

$170

Hardback

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English
Equinox Publishing Ltd
09 October 2012
Modern Irish is a VSO language, in common with the other Celtic languages, and the order of elements in the structure of transitive sentences is verb-subject-object. This book provides a characterisation of the nominal, verb, clause and information structure of the Irish language from a functional perspective based on Role and Reference Grammar. We include in this analysis the layered structure of the noun phrase of Irish and the various NP operators, the layered structure of the clause and the verbal system at the syntax-semantic interface along with a number of verb valence behaviours as mediated by event and argument structure. Additionally, we survey previous treatments of Irish within a functionalist approach.

The verbal noun has a special place within the Irish language and its deployment is particularly productive. We examine the derivation of the verbal noun and the contexts in which it is used. We also provide an account of light verbs and complex predicates as they occur within Irish and link this to a characterisation of the information structure of Irish. We will, in addition, provide an analysis of certain linguistically interesting phenomena that are particular to Irish (and the other Celtic languages) including the two verbs of 'to be'. Within the verbal system our concern is with the relationship between the semantic representation of a verbal predicate in the context of a clause and its syntactic expression through the argument structure of the verb. We will suggest that lexical specification is via a logical representation that reflects the aspectual decomposition of the verbal predicate and that this determines, with an actor-undergoer hierarchy, the operation of the mapping into syntax via the linking system. This book will be of interest to all linguists operating within the broad functional paradigm, along with scholars, researchers and postgraduate students interested in Irish, in particular, and the Celtic languages in general.
By:  
Imprint:   Equinox Publishing Ltd
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 236mm,  Width: 160mm,  Spine: 28mm
Weight:   580g
ISBN:   9781845534219
ISBN 10:   1845534212
Series:   Discussions in Functional Approaches to Language
Pages:   304
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Further / Higher Education
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
1 Introduction 2 Causation 3 The Reflexive Constructions in Modern Irish 4. The Personal Passive Construction and its Variants 5 The Impersonal Passive 6 The Recipient and Passive GET Construction with 'faigh' 7 The Expression of Modality in Irish 8 Complex Predicates and Irish Light Verb Constructions 9 Information Structure - Focus and Copula Clefts 10 The Layered Structure of the Noun Phrase 11 The Layered Structure of the Irish Word 12 Concluding discussion

Brian Nolan is Head of the Department of Informatics at the Institute of Technology Blanchardstown in Dublin, Ireland. His research interests range over computational approaches to speech and language processing, the syntax-semantic interface, argument structure and the structure of events in language, linguistic typology and functional approaches to language. He is especially interested in the linguistic description of Modern Irish.

Reviews for The Structure of Modern Irish: A Functional Account

The book is intended to be of use for a wide and diverse scholarly audience, and it certainly meets this expectation. Linguistically minded scholars of Irish will gain much insight in reading this volume, and undoubtedly will benefit from the examinations of some hitherto unobserved features of the language. Researchers within RRG will profit from seeing the model applied to Irish, a language not previously captured in a functional model. The many suggested expansions of the theory are favourable and worthy of attention from within the RRG community. The book will certainly be of interest to readers outside the intended audience. In fact, one of the strongest attributes of the book is the lead-in accompanying each chapter that introduces the forthcoming topic, which will be of use to anyone seeking the syntactic analysis of a particular construction. Besides, the volume is well-grounded with numerous references to established texts on the chosen topic. This means that each analysis of an Irish construction is founded on a firm and informed theoretical basis. Folio Linguistica, May 2014


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