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Gradience of Gradience: A reply to Jackendoff

Linguistic Review, 2007
Jackendoff and other linguists have acknowledged that there is gradience in language but have tended to treat gradient phenomena as separate from the core of language, which is viewed as fully productive and compositional. This perspective suffuses Jackendoff’s (2007) response to our position paper (Bybee and McClelland 2005).
Joan Bybee
exaly   +2 more sources

Gradience in Grammar

2006
Abstract This book represents the state of the art in the study of gradience in grammar: the degree to which utterances are acceptable or grammatical, and the relationship between acceptability and grammaticality. Gradience is at the centre of controversial issues in the theory of grammar and the understanding of language.
Gisbert Fanselow   +2 more
exaly   +5 more sources

Word Classes and Gradience

2023
Abstract For a long time, word classes (and categories in general) were assumed to be well delineated, distinguishable on the basis of well-defined features, and with strict boundaries between them. In the course of the twentieth century, this classical view of categorization came to be challenged, first in philosophy and psychology, and
exaly   +4 more sources

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