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Ellipsis and Focus in Generative Grammar
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Ellipsis and Focus in Generative GrammarCovering linguistic research on empty categories over more than three decades, this monograph presents the result of an in-depth syntactic and focus-theoretical investigation of ellipsis in generative grammar. The phenomenon of ellipsis most generally refers to the omission of linguistic material, structure and sound. The central aim of this book is to explain on the basis of linguistic theorizing of how it is possible that we understand more than we actually hear. The answer developed throughout this book is that ellipsis is an interface phenomenon which can only be explained on the basis of the complex interaction between syntax, semantics and information structure.
 
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Tags: ellipsis, linguistic, structure, basis, phenomenon
Ellipsis - Of Poetry and the Experience of Language After Heidegger, Holderlin, and Blanchot
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Ellipsis - Of Poetry and the Experience of Language After Heidegger, Holderlin, and BlanchotEllipsis - Of Poetry and the Experience of Language After Heidegger, Holderlin, and Blanchot

What is the nature of poetic language when its experience involves an encounter with finitude; with failure, loss, and absence? For Martin Heidegger this experience is central to any thinking that would seek to articulate the meaning of being, but for Friedrich H?lderlin and Maurice Blanchot it is a mark of the tragic and unanswerable demands of poetic language.
 
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Tags: Blanchot, Heidegger, experience, poetic, language, Ellipsis
Words and Thoughts: Subsentences, Ellipsis, and the Philosophy of Language
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Words and Thoughts: Subsentences, Ellipsis, and the Philosophy of LanguageIt is a near truism of philosophy of language that sentences are prior to words. Sentences, it is said, are what we believe, assert, and argue for; uses of them constitute our evidence in semantics; only they stand in inferential relations, and are true or false. Sentences are, indeed, the only things that fundamentally have meaning. Does this near truism really hold of human languages? Robert Stainton, drawing on a wide body of evidence, argues forcefully that speakers can and do use mere words, not sentences, to communicate complete thoughts.
 
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Tags: Words and Thoughts: Subsentences, Ellipsis, and the Philosophy of Language, Sentences, evidence, truism, words, sentences, Sentences
A Theory of Ellipsis
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A Theory of EllipsisEllipsis is the non-expression of one or more sentence elements whose meaning can be reconstructed either from the context or from a person's knowledge of the world. In speech and writing, ellipsis is pervasive, contributing in various ways to the economy, speed, and style of communication. Resolving ellipsis is a particularly challenging issue in natural language processing, since not only must meaning be gleaned from missing elements but the fact that something meaningful is missing must be detected in the first place.

 
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Tags: missing, ellipsis, Ellipsis, meaning, elements
Ellipsis and Nonsentential Speech (Studies in Linguistics and Philosophy)
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Ellipsis and Nonsentential Speech (Studies in Linguistics and Philosophy)
Ellipsis and Nonsentential Speech (Studies in Linguistics and Philosophy)
The papers in this volume address two main topics:
Q1: What is the nature, and especially the scope, of ellipsis in natural language?
Q2: What are the linguistic/philosophical implications of what one takes the nature/scope of ellipsis to be?
Each of these main topics includes a large sub-part that deals specifically with nonsentential speech. Within the first main topic, Q1, there arises the sub-issue of whether nonsentential speech falls within the scope of ellipsis or not; within the second main topic, Q2, there arises the sub-issue of what linguistic/philosophical implications follow, if nonsentential speech does/does not count as ellipsis.
* This book is unique in that it offers the reader;
o Papers on the boundary between philosophy and linguistics,
o Applications of advanced work in theoretical linguistics to traditional philosophical questions,
o It is the only volume of papers ever published on sub-sentential speech,
o Major contribution to our understanding of ellipsis in natural language, presently a central topic in syntactic theory.
* This book is of interest to professionals and advanced graduate students in the fields of philosophy of language, semantics, and syntax.
 
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Tags: ellipsis, speech, nonsentential, linguistics, language, topic