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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Prague Linguistic Circle Papers

Travaux du cercle linguistique de Prague nouvelle série

Volume 4

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Edited by Eva Hajičová, Petr Sgall, Jirí Hana and Tomáš Hoskovec
Charles University

2002. viii, 376 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 5444 3 / EUR 125.00
978 1 58811 175 3 / USD 188.00
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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9688 7 / EUR 125.00 / USD 188.00
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The fourth volume of the revived series of “Travaux du Cercle linguistique de Prague” brings three contributions (by J. Vachek, O. Leška and V. Skalička) connected with the classical period of the Prague School, as well as papers delivered at the conference “Function, Form, and Meaning: Bridges and Interfaces”, held in Prague in 1998. Some of the contributions concern issues of grammar of different languages including a syntactic annotation of a large Czech text corpus, a comparison of Hebrew conditionals with English, a characterization of the typology of the Indo-European verb. A further part focuses on topic-focus articulation (information sentence structure, functional sentence perspective), with a concept of ‘perspective’ introduced as close to but distinct from ‘topic’ and with three different viewpoints on the semantics of information structure. Two broader essays on the nature of language are then presented, while the last section analyzes the structure of free verse. The volume represents a contribution to the continuing fruitful interaction between the work of the Prague School and the more and less closely related approaches of linguists in other countries.


Table of contents

Preface
vii
Section I: The Prague tradition in retrospect
Prolegomena to the history of the Prague School of Linguistics
Josef Vachek
3–81
Anton Marty’s philosophy of language
Oldřich Leška †
83–99
Die Typologie des Ungarischen
Vladimír Skalička †
101–108
Section II: Grammar
Theoretical description of language as a basis of corpus annotation: The case of Prague Dependency Treebank
Eva Hajičová
111–127
“Conditionals” in Hebrew and English: same or different?
Yishai Tobin
129–142
Sur la paradigmatisation du verbe indo-européen: (Deuxième partie)
Tomáš Hoskovec
143–181
Section III: Topic–Focus articulation
The Russian genitive of negation in existential sentences: The role of Theme–Rheme structure reconsidered
Vladimir Borschev and Barbara H. Partee
185–250
Synonymy vs. differentiation of variant syntactic realizations of FSP functions
Libuše Dušková
251–261
Topic–Focus articulation as generalized quantification
Jaroslav Peregrin
263–273
Information structure and the partition of sentence meaning
Klaus von Heusinger
275–305
Section IV: General views
Freedom of language: Its nature, its sources, and its consequences
Petr Sgall
309–329
The natural order of cognitive events
Philip A. Luelsdorff
331–362
Section V: Poetics
The principle of free verse
Miroslav Červenka
365–376