Beschreibung
InhaltsangabeIntroduction. 1. Why `subject' is a grammatical concept. Part I: The Syntax of Predication. 2. The grammatical theory of predication. 3. The syntactic properties of subjects. 4. Predication as a thematic relation. 5. The Syntactic Forms of Predication. Part II: The Semantics of Predication. 6. Interpretation. 7. The semantics of pleonastics. Part III: The Syntax and Semantics of Copula Constructions. 8. Predication structures in Modern Hebrew identity constructions. 9. Copular constructions in English. 10. The Meaning of `Be'.
Inhalt
Introduction. 1. Why subject'' is a grammatical concept. Part I: The Syntax of Predication. 2. The grammatical theory of predication. 3. The syntactic properties of subjects. 4. Predication as a thematic relation. 5. The Syntactic Forms of Predication. Part II: The Semantics of Predication. 6. Interpretation. 7. The semantics of pleonastics. Part III: The Syntax and Semantics of Copula Constructions. 8. Predication structures in Modern Hebrew identity constructions. 9. Copular constructions in English. 10. The Meaning of Be''.