The Cambridge grammar of the English language_text.pdf

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Cambridge
H6
C
Grammar
English
Language
Rodney
Huddleston
Geoffrey
K.
Pullum
in
collaboration
with
Laurie
Bauer
Betty
Birner
Ted
Briscoe
Peter
Collins
David
Denison
David
Lee
Anita
Mittwoch
Geoffrey
Nunberg
ml)
CCEE
:izd
.
Frank
Palmer
John
Payne
Peter
Peterson
Lesley
Stirling
li
i
jii
*
Gregory
Ward
2110
003229468
CAMBRIDGE
UNIVERSITY
PRESS
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2002
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Huddleston,
Rodney
D.
The
Cambridge
grammar
of
the
English
language
/
Rodney
Huddleston,
Geoffrey
K.
Pullum
p.
cm.
8
Includes
bibliographical
references
and
index.
jsbn
o
521
43146
1.
(hardback)
English
language
-
Grammar.
425-dc2i
1.
Pullum,
Geoffrey
K.
n.
Title.
PEI106.H74
2002
2001025630
isbn
978-0-521-43146-0
(hardback)
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ihereaiter.
Contents
f
of
contributors
vi
tational
conventions
x
e
diagrams
xiii
i
face
xv
Preliminaries
i
Geoffrey
2
Syntactic
K.
Pullum
and
a
Rodney
Huddleston
overview
Rodney
Huddleston
3
The
verb
71
Rodney
Huddleston
213
4
The
clause:
complements
Rodney
Huddleston
5
Nouns
and
noun
phrases
323
John
Payne
and
Rodney
Huddleston
6
Adjectives
and
adverbs
525
Geoffrey
K.
Pullum
and
Rodney
Huddleston
7
Prepositions
Geoffrey
8
K.
and
preposition
phrases
597
Pullum
and
Rodney
Huddleston
Peter
Collins
The
clause:
adjuncts
663
Anita
Mittwoch,
Rodney
Huddleston,
and
9
Negation
785
Geoffrey
K.
Pullum
and
Rodney
Huddleston
10
Clause
type
and
iliocutionary
force
Rodney
Huddleston
851
11
Content
clauses
and
reported
speech
947
Rodney
Huddleston
Relative
constructions
and
unbounded
dependencies
1031
Rodney
Huddleston,
Geoffrey
K.
Pullum,
and
Peter
Peterson
12
13
Comparative
constructions
1097
Rodney
Huddleston
1171
14
Non-finite
and
verbless
clauses
Rodney
Huddleston
15
Coordination
and
supplementation
1273
Rodney
Huddleston,
John
Payne,
and
Peter
Peterson
16
information
packaging
1363
Gregory
Ward,
Betty
Birner,
and
Rodney
Huddleston
17
Deixis
and
anaphora
1449
Lesley
Stirling
and
Rodney
Huddleston
18
Inflectional
morphology
and
related
matters
1565
and
Frank
Palmer,
Rodney
Huddleston,
19
Lexical
wora-tormatsors
1021
Geoffrey
K.
Pullum
Laurie
Bauer
and
Rodney
Huddleston
20
Punctuation
7
Geoffrey
Nunberg,
Ted
Briscoe,
and
Rodney
Huddleston
1
-iher
'ex
reading
1765
1779
index
.exical
1780
Conceptual
index
1813
Contributors
Rodney
Huddleston
to
the
held
lectureships
at
the
University
of
Edinburgh,
University
College
London,
and
the
University
of
Reading
before
moving
Department
of
English
at
the
University
of
Queensland,
where
he
is
won
an
'Excellence
in
Teaching'
award;
he
a
Fellow of
the
Australian
Academy
of
the
Humanities,
and
in
1990
was
awarded
a
Personal
Chair.
He
has
written
numerous
articles
and
books
011
English
grammar,
including
The
Sentence
in
Written
English
(1971),
English
English
An
Introduction
to
Transformational
Syntax
(1976),
Introduction
to
the
Grammar
of
(1984)
and
English
Grammar:
An
Outline
(1988).
He
was
the
founding
editor
of
the
Australian
Journal
of
Linguistics
(1980-85).
Geoffrey
K.
Pullum
taught
years
before
at
University
College
London
for
seven
moving
to
the
University
of
California,
Santa
Cruz,
where
is
he
served
as
Dean
of
Graduate
Studies
and
Research
and
Professor
of
Linguistics.
currently
He
was
a
Fellow
at
the
Center
for
Advanced
Studies
in
the
Behavioral
Sciences
in
1990-91.
His
many
publications
books
include
cover
not
only
English
large
grammar
and
the
theory
of
syntax
but
also
a
number
of
other
topics
in
linguistics.
His
scholarly
Rule
Interaction
and
the
Organization
of a
Phrase
Structure
Grammar
(1985,
with
Grammar
(1979),
Generalized
Gerald
Gazdar,
Ewan
Klein,
and
Ivan
A.
Sag),
and
Phonetic
Symbol
Guide
(1986,
2nd
edn
1996,
with
William
A.
Ladusaw).
essays
He
has
also
published
a
collection
of
satirical
(1991),
on
linguistics,
The
Great
Eskimo
Vocabulary
Hoax
lectures
and
given
many
popular
and
radio
talks
on
language.
Laurie
Bauer
holds
Linguistics
a
Personal
Chair
in
Linguistics
in
the
School
of
and
Applied
Language
Studies,
Victoria
University
of
New
Zealand.
He
has published
widely
on
English
word-formation
and
New
Zealand
English,
and
is
a
member
of
the
Wellington,
editorial
boards
of
the
Yearbook
of
Morphology
and
English
World-Wide.
His
major
publications
include
English
Word-formation
(1983),
Introducing
Linguistic
Morphology
(1988),
Watching
English
Change
(1994),
and
Morphological
Productivity
(2001),
and
he
is
the
joint
editor,
with
Peter
Trudgill,
of
Language
Myths
(1998).
Contributors
vii
Betty
J.
Birner
Northern
is
an
Assistant
Professor
in
the
Department
of
English
at
Illinois
University.
She
is
the
author
of
The
Discourse
Function
of
Inversion
in
English
(1996),
as
well
as
co-author,
with
Gregory
Ward,
of
Information
Status
and
Noncanonical
Word
Order
in
English
(1998).
She
held
a
postdoctoral
fellowship
at
the
University
of
Pennsylvania's
Institute
for
Research
in
Cognitive
Science
from
1993
to
1995,
and
has
served
as
an
expert
witness
in
the
area
of
text
interpretation.
Ted
Briscoe
is
a
member
of
staff
at
the
Computer
Laboratory,
University
and
automated
speech
and
language
processing.
course
on
Natural
Language
Processing
and
is
of
Cambridge.
His
broad
research
interests
are
computational
and
theoretical
linguistics,
He
teaches
an
advanced
M.Phil,
in
heavily
involved
in
the
teaching
of
the
Laboratory's
contribution
to
the
Computer
Speech,
Text,
and
Internet
Technology,
run
jointly
with
the
Engineering
Department.
From
1990
until
1996
he
was an
at
EPSRC
Advanced
Research
Fellow
undertaking
research
Macquarie
University
in
Sydney,
University
of
Pennsylvania
in
Philadelphia,
and
Xerox
European
Research
Centre
in
Grenoble,
as
well
as
fifty
at
the
Computer
Laboratory.
He
has
published
around
Peter
Collins
Linguistics
research
articles.
is
Associate
Professor
of
Linguistics
and
at
the
Head
of
the
Department
University
of
New
South
Wales.
He
has
also
taught
linguistics
at
Sydney
University
and
Macquarie
University,
and
is
currently the
Editor
of
the
Australian
Journal
of
Linguistics.
Recently
published
books
include
Australian
English:
The
Language
of
a
New
Society
(1989,
with
David
Blair),
in
English
(1991),
English
Cleft
and
Pseudo-cleft
Constructions
edited
with
David
Lee),
Grammar
(1998),
The
Clause
in
English
(1999,
English
Grammar:
An
Introduction
(2000,
with
Blair).
Carmella
Hollo),
and
English
in
Australia
(2001,
with
David
Anita
Mittwoch
English,
is
Associate
Professor
Emeritus
in
the
Department
of
The
Hebrew
University
of
Jerusalem.
Her
main
work
has
been
is
in
the area
of
aspect,
adjuncts,
and
events
in
grammar,
and
she
articles
in
the
author
of
numerous
books
and
journals,
including
Linguistics
and
Philosophy,
Journal
of
Linguistics,
Natural
Language
Semantics,
and
Linguistic
Inquiry.
She
was
President
of
the
Israel
Association
for
Theoretical
Linguistics
in
1991-95
and
1997-99.
Xerox
Palo
Alto
at
Geoffrey
Nunberg
Research
Center
and
is
a
Principal
Scientist
at
the
a
Consulting
Professor
of
Linguistics
Stanford
University.
Before
going
to
PARC
in
1986,
he
taught
at
UCLA,
Stanford,
and
the
University
of
Rome.
He
has
written
on
a
range
of
topics,
including
semantics
and
pragmatics,
information
access,
written
language
structure,
multilingualism
and
language
policy,
and
the
cultural
implications
of
digital
technologies.
He
is
usage
editor
and
chair
of
the
usage
panel
of
the
American
Heritage
Dictionary
and
has
also
written
on
language
and
other
topics
for
general
magazines.
His
publications
include
The
Linguistics
of
Punctuation
O990).
many
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