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6 - Grammatical relations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Robert D. van Valin
Affiliation:
State University of New York, Buffalo
Randy J. LaPolla
Affiliation:
Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan
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Summary

Introduction

At the beginning of chapter 2 we stated that there are two types of structure, relational and non-relational. As the labels imply, relational structure deals with the relations that exist between one syntactic element and another, be they syntactic, semantic or pragmatic in nature, whereas non-relational structure expresses the hierarchical organization of phrases, clauses and sentences. Non-relational structure was the focus of chapter 2, while semantic and pragmatic relational structures were the topics of chapters 3–5. In this chapter we turn to syntactic relations, or, as they are better known, grammatical relations. We will begin by looking at some of the conceptions of grammatical relations that have been proposed by different linguistic theories and the implications for theory and analysis of each of the major conceptions, then we will discuss the cross-linguistic diversity of syntactic phenomena related to grammatical relations and propose an account of grammatical relations which deals with this diversity.

Conceptions of grammatical relations

Grammatical relations are a part of traditional grammar. They are important because if one thinks pretheoretically, or as pretheoretically as one can, it is obvious that there are a lot of syntactic phenomena that relate to grammatical relations. For example, if one considers what the -s is doing on the third person singular present tense verb in English, it is clear that it is agreeing with the subject. Notice that this innocuous statement presupposes a theory of grammatical relations of some kind.

Type
Chapter
Information
Syntax
Structure, Meaning, and Function
, pp. 242 - 316
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1997

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