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Case
A concise and accessible 2001 introduction to the ways in which relations between words in sentences are marked in languages.
Barry J. Blake (Author)
9780521807616, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 20 September 2001
248 pages, 38 tables
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.7 cm, 0.54 kg
Case is an accessible introduction for students of linguistics to the ways relations between words in sentences are marked in languages. Case is fundamental to the whole system of language. One of its most interesting features is the recurrence of apparently idiosyncratic patterns and devices in otherwise unrelated languages. This book picks out these recurring strategies and explores their significance. It provides the background against which the case-marking of particular languages can be best understood. In this revised 2001 edition, Blake refines and expands on his discussions of the most important concepts in the study of case, taking into account recent developments in the field. It incorporates significant additions to the data and includes a thoroughly revised section on abstract case in the Chomskyan paradigm.
1. Overview
2. Problems in describing case systems
3. Modern approaches to case
4. Distribution of case marking
5. Survey of case marking
6. Life cycle of case systems
Notes
Guide to terminology
Guide to further reading
References
Index.
Subject Areas: Grammar, syntax & morphology [CFK]
