Catching Language: The Standing Challenge of Grammar Writing

Front Cover
Felix K. Ameka, Alan Dench, Nicholas Evans
Walter de Gruyter, Aug 22, 2008 - Language Arts & Disciplines - 670 pages

Descriptive grammars are our main vehicle for documenting and analysing the linguistic structure of the world's 6,000 languages. They bring together, in one place, a coherent treatment of how the whole language works, and therefore form the primary source of information on a given language, consulted by a wide range of users: areal specialists, typologists, theoreticians of any part of language (syntax, morphology, phonology, historical linguistics etc.), and members of the speech communities concerned. The writing of a descriptive grammar is a major intellectual challenge, that calls on the grammarian to balance a respect for the language's distinctive genius with an awareness of how other languages work, to combine rigour with readability, to depict structural regularities while respecting a corpus of real material, and to represent something of the native speaker's competence while recognising the variation inherent in any speech community.

Despite a recent surge of awareness of the need to document little-known languages, there is no book that focusses on the manifold issues that face the author of a descriptive grammar. This volume brings together contributors who approach the problem from a range of angles. Most have written descriptive grammars themselves, but others represent different types of reader. Among the topics they address are: overall issues of grammar design, the complementary roles of outsider and native speaker grammarians, the balance between grammar and lexicon, cross-linguistic comparability, the role of explanation in grammatical description, the interplay of theory and a range of fieldwork methods in language description, the challenges of describing languages in their cultural and historical context, and the tensions between linguistic particularity, established practice of particular schools of linguistic description and the need for a universally commensurable analytic framework.

This book will renew the field of grammaticography, addressing a multiple readership of descriptive linguists, typologists, and formal linguists, by bringing together a range of distinguished practitioners from around the world to address these questions.

 

Contents

Catching language
1
The art and craft of writing grammars
41
Reflections on native speaker and nonnative speaker descriptions of a language
69
Crosslinguistic grammatography as database creation
113
A typologist users point of view
137
Calculus of possibilities as a technique in linguistic typology
171
Descriptive theories explanatory theories and Basic Linguistic Theory
207
Let the language tell its story? The role of linguistic theory in writing grammars
235
Lexicon grammar or both?
359
Converbs in an African perspective
393
The case of disposal constructions in Sinitic languages
441
Multifunctional ma in Tagalog
487
The interplay of synchronic and diachronic discovery in Siouan grammarwriting
527
The case of Modern Greek
549
Polylectal grammar and Royal Thai
565
Writing culture in grammar in the Americanist tradition
609

On describing word order
269
Heterosemy and the grammarlexicon tradeoff
297
Stimulibased techniques and the study of locative verbs
321
Backmatter
629
Copyright

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About the author (2008)

Nicholas Evans is Professor of Linguistics at the University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

Alan Dench is Professor of Linguistics at the University of Western Australia, Crawley, Australia.

Felix K. Ameka is Lecturer at Leiden University, The Netherlands, and Editor of the Journal of African Languages and Linguistics (JALL).