CSLI Publications logo
new books
catalog
series
contact us
for authors
order
search
LFG Proceedings
CSLI Publications
Facebook

Extending the Applicability of Lexical Mapping Theory

Anna Kibort

Abstract

LFG grants syntactic functions a central role and has developed a theory of argument structure, Lexical Mapping Theory (LMT), which is independent of phrase-structure trees and thus able to account for morpholexical derivations. Yet some fundamental phenomena falling within the scope of morpholexical analysis - such as morphosemantic (meaning-altering) operations, phenomena referred to elsewhere as 'demotions', or subjectlessness - are currently denied satisfactory LMT accounts. This paper offers a way of extending LMT to phenomena which are awkward or impossible to handle with the current widely accepted versions of LMT.

While retaining the main component of LMT - the feature decomposition of syntactic functions - I suggest the following set of revisions: (1) restoring the early LFG distinction between argument positions and semantic roles; (2) allowing the semantic participants to change order and re-associate with different argument positions for non-default (morphosemantically altered) mappings; (3) fixing the order of (syntactic) argument positions; (4) reformulating the principles of argument-to-function mapping to make fuller use of the markedness hierarchy of syntactic functions and render the Subject Condition redundant; and (5) using a mechanism of increasing markedness to account for morphosyntactic operations referred to as 'demotions' in RG. I demonstrate that these revisions make LMT a cleaner formalism which is immediately applicable to some important phenomena that have so far escaped (good) analyses.

pubs @ csli.stanford.edu 
CSLI Publications
Stanford University
Cordura Hall
210 Panama Street
Stanford, CA 94305-4101
(650) 723-1839