Review essay on: Goldberg, A. Constructions: A construction
grammar
approach to argument structure. University of Chicago Press (1995).
Pp. xi+265.
The cornerstone of traditional descriptive grammars is the construction:
a
recurrent pattern of linguistic elements that serves some well-defined
communicative function. Prototypical constructions are sentence-level
patterns such as, in English: the imperative, the ditransitive, the passive,
the
resultative, the yes–no question, and the cleft (each of which may
have some
subtypes). Also included in some theorists' definition of construction
are
components of sentences such as the prepositional phrase, the noun phrase,
or the genitive noun phrase. Traditional constructions may have some
specific words or morphemes associated with them (e.g. by in the
full passive,
's in the genitive), but these are generally closed-class
morphemes. Almost by
definition, traditional constructions are relatively abstract patterns
that apply
across whole classes of open-class morphemes.
One of the defining features of modern-day generative grammar is the
absence of constructions. Chomsky (1981) hypothesized that grammatical
structure comprises two primary levels: the level of principles and parameters,
which is much more abstract than constructions and includes
everything from the subjacency constraint to the empty category principle,
and the level of the lexicon, which includes all of the concrete morphemes
and words of a particular language. In this view, constructions represent
a
‘middle level’ of analysis that is, in effect, an epiphenomenon
resulting from
the interaction of the two primary levels. One outcome of this theoretical
move has been that generative linguists concerned with construction-level
phenomena have had to fill the generative lexicon with ever richer types
of
linguistic information, especially for verbs (e.g. Bresnan, 1982; Jackendoff,
1990; Levin, 1995; Pinker, 1989).