Produktbild: Semantics in Action
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Semantics in Action A Hands-On Guide

Aus der Reihe Linguistics in the World

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

29.09.2026

Verlag

Wiley

Seitenzahl

304

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-394-24485-0

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

29.09.2026

Verlag

Wiley

Seitenzahl

304

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-394-24485-0

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Semantics in Action
  • Preface xi

    Acknowledgments xiii

    List of Abbreviations and Special Symbols xiv

    1 Introduction: Compositional Semantics for Natural Language 1

    1.1 How to study semantics of natural language 2

    1.2 Motivations for adopting a referential theory of meaning 3

    1.3 Compositional semantics: first steps 4

    1.4 Our official syntax-semantics interface system in a nutshell 6

    1.5 Some important syntactic concepts 9

    1.6 How we use the Japanese data 11

    1.7 Typological differences between English and Japanese 11

    1.8 Semantics and Pragmatics 13

    2 Set Theory and Higher-Order Logic 17

    2.1 Set Theory - The bare-bones essence needed for semantic research 18

    2.2 Propositional Logic 24

    2.3 Predicate Logic without quantifiers - syntax 27

    2.4 Predicate Logic without quantifiers - semantics 28

    2.5 Quantifiers in Predicate Logic 30

    2.6 Higher-order logic with the lambda operator - syntax 33

    2.7 Higher-order logic with the lambda operator - semantics 36

    3 Simple Sentences 42

    3.1 The overall architecture of the theory 43

    3.2 Names 43

    3.3 Intransitive verbs 44

    3.4 Adjectives 44

    3.5 Common nouns 45

    3.6 Transitive verbs 46

    3.7 Prepositions and Prepositional Phrases 47

    3.8 Some exceptional cases 48

    3.9 Intransitive verbs in Japanese 50

    3.10 Adjectives and adjectival nouns in Japanese 51

    3.11 Transitive verbs in Japanese 51

    3.12 Double subject constructions in Japanese 52

    4 Adnominal Modifiers 56

    4.1 Introduction 57

    4.2 Prepositional Phrases as modifiers 57

    4.3 Participial modifiers 58

    4.4 Adjectives used attributively 59

    4.5 Attributive nouns 65

    4.6 Postpositional phrases in Japanese 66

    4.7 Participial modifiers in Japanese 67

    4.8 Attributive adjectives in Japanese 68

    5 Determiners and Determiner Phrases 70

    5.1 Introduction 71

    5.2 Quantified DPs are not referential expressions 71

    5.3 Relational analysis of determiners 74

    5.4 Compositional semantics for English DPs 77

    5.5 Some examples of compositional semantic computations 79

    5.6 The semantics of determiners 83

    5.7 The definite article the 85

    5.8 Names as generalized quantifiers 87

    5.9 Japanese quantifiers 89

    6 Relative Clauses 95

    6.1 Introduction 96

    6.2 English relative clauses 97

    6.3 Japanese gapped relative clauses with no quantifiers 102

    6.4 Japanese gapped relative clauses with quantifiers 105

    6.5 Externally-headed Japanese relative clauses with no obvious gaps 106

    6.6 Internally-headed relative clauses in Japanese 108

    7 Quantifier Scope and Pronouns 113

    7.1 Introduction 114

    7.2 DP quantifiers in the object position 114

    7.3 Quantifier scope ambiguity 118

    7.4 Free-variable pronouns and bound-variable pronouns 120

    7.5 Japanese quantifiers and scope ambiguity 124

    7.6 Negation and quantifiers in English 126

    7.7 Negation and quantifiers in Japanese 129

    8 Intensionality and Modals 134

    8.1 Introduction 135

    8.2 English modal auxiliaries and their semantic properties 135

    8.3 How Japanese expresses modal concepts 143

    8.4 Compositional semantics 145

    9 Believe and Its Kin 151

    9.1 Introduction 152

    9.2 Propositional attitude verbs and the interpretation of complement clauses 153

    9.3 A formal analysis of believe 154

    9.4 De dicto vs. de re 156

    9.5 De se 158

    9.6 Indefinite DP cases 160

    9.7 Intensional adjectives 162

    10 Tense 164

    10.1 Introduction 165

    10.2 Present tense 165

    10.3 Past tense 167

    10.4 Future tense 170

    10.5 Tense in Japanese 170

    10.6 Compositional semantic calculations 171

    10.7 Tense in complement clauses 173

    10.8 Temporal examples of de se attitudes 176

    10.9 Topic Time 177

    11 Events 180

    11.1 Introduction 181

    11.2 Adverbs 181

    11.3 Pronominal anaphora 182

    11.4 Event nouns 183

    11.5 A compositional semantic analysis of Davidson's proposal 184

    11.6 Neo-Davidsonian Theory of events 186

    11.7 Additional motivations for introducing events to semantic theory 188

    11.8 Some implications of the neo-Davidsonian analysis 189

    12 Aspect 192

    12.1 Introduction 193

    12.2 Aktionsarten - lexical aspect properties of predicates 193

    12.3 Formal characterization of action types (or Aktionsarten) 195

    12.4 The progressive 198

    12.5 The semantics of the English progressive 199

    12.6 The English perfect - Informal discussion 203

    12.7 Japanese Aktionsarten 205

    12.8 The Japanese -te iru construction 206

    12.9 The perfective, the imperfective, and the perfect 207

    13 Count, Mass, Bare Nouns, and Plurals 212

    13.1 Introduction 213

    13.2 Distributive reading and plurality 213

    13.3 Collective readings with plural DPs 216

    13.4 Counting and measuring in English 218

    13.5 Counting and measuring in Japanese 220

    13.6 Bare plurals and bare nouns 222

    14 Discourse, Pragmatics, and Beyond 229

    14.1 Introduction 230

    14.2 Quantified DPs vs. indefinite and definite descriptions 230

    14.3 Donkey anaphora 233

    14.4 A solution to the donkey anaphora problem 236

    14.5 Temporal properties of discourse 239

    14.6 Pragmatic meaning types 242

    14.7 Japanese data and their theoretical implications 243

    15 Summary and Conclusion 248

    15.1 Introduction 249

    15.2 Set Theory basics, predicate logic, and its extensions 249

    15.3 Simple sentences 249

    15.4 Adnominal modifiers 251

    15.5 Determiners and determiner phrases 251

    15.6 Relative clauses 252

    15.7 Quantifier scope and pronouns 254

    15.8 Intensionality and modals 255

    15.9 Believe and its kin 256

    15.10 Tense 257

    15.11 Events 258

    15.12 Aspect 259

    15.13 Count, mass, bare nouns, and bare plurals 259

    15.14 Discourse, pragmatics, and beyond 262

    15.15 Conclusion 262

    Solutions to Exercises 264

    Index 000