Appendix LRS Principles: Difference between revisions
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of the head's PARTS list, then | of the head's PARTS list, then | ||
# it is a component of the semantic argument of the head's MAIN value, and | # it is a component of the semantic argument of the head's MAIN value, and | ||
# if the INDEX|VAR value of a nonhead daughter occurs inside this argument slot, then the nonhead's INTERNAL-CONTENT and the head's INTERNAL-CONTENT are identical. | # if the INDEX | VAR value of a nonhead daughter occurs inside this argument slot, then the nonhead's INTERNAL-CONTENT and the head's INTERNAL-CONTENT are identical. | ||
Revision as of 08:49, 12 February 2013
On this page we collect all the principles from the textbook that relate to the values of CONTENT and LOGICAL form. The principles appear in alphabetic order.
Content Principle
Content Principle:
In any headed phrase, the SYNSEM | LOCAL | CONTENT value of
the mother and the head daughter are identical.
Introduced in Chapter 5 (Simplified LRS)
Content-LF Principle
Content-LF Principle:
In any sign, the expressions in the
SYNSEM | LOCAL | CONTENT | MAIN value and the
SYNSEM | LOCAL | CONTENT | INDEX | VAR
value must be elements of the sign's LF | PARTS list.
External Content Principle
LRS Projection Principle
LRS Projection Principle (final version going back to Penn and Richter
(2004)):
In every headed phrase,
- The EXTERNAL-CONTENT value of the mother and the head daughter are identical.
- The INTERNAL-CONTENT value of the mother and the head daughter are identical.
- The PARTS list of a phrase is the concatenation of the PARTS lists of its daughters.
The final version of this principle is introduced in Chapter 6 of the textbook.
Internal Content Raising Principle
In a head-complement structure, if the INTERNAL-CONTENT value of the head is not a member of the head's PARTS list, then
- it is a component of the semantic argument of the head's MAIN value, and
- if the INDEX | VAR value of a nonhead daughter occurs inside this argument slot, then the nonhead's INTERNAL-CONTENT and the head's INTERNAL-CONTENT are identical.
This principle is introduced in Chapter 6 of the textbook and further illustrated with examples in Chapter 7.
Semantics Principle
In every headed phrase,
- If the nonhead is a determiner with an INTERNAL-CONTENT of the form Qx(φ:ψ), then
the INTERNAL-CONTENT of the head is a component of φ
and the head and the nonhead have identical EXTERNAL-CONTENT values. - If the nonhead is a quantified NP with an EXTERNAL-CONTENT value of the form Qx(φ:ψ),
then the INTERNAL-CONTENT of the head is a component of ψ.
Clauses 1 and 2 are introduced in Chapter 6 of the textbook.