Stephen Wechsler: Dualist Syntax
A dualist syntax has two components: (1) the lexicon, a structured set
of formatives ('words'); and (2) rules for combining those formatives into
utterances. This paper defends syntactic dualism against three
'monist' challenges.
First, evidence for lexical argument structure can be found in deverbal
nominalization, which preserves that structure systematically. Second,
words represent the smallest units for idiom formation and contextual polysemy
effects, which is expected on the dualist view but not if word meanings
are composed in the syntax. Third, the count/mass properties of nouns suggest
an interleaving of conceptual and grammatical information in semantic
composition.
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Maintained by Stefan Müller
Created: October 21, 2008
Last modified: October 21, 2008
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