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Physical Description: | XVII, 484 S. graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 9789054879442 9054879440 |
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100 | 1 | |a Scheppers, Frank |e Verfasser |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a The colon hypothesis |b word order, discourse segmentation and discourse coherence in ancient Greek |c Frank Scheppers |
264 | 1 | |a Brussels |b VUBPress |c 2011 | |
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Record in the Search Index
_version_ | 1819265142517399552 |
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adam_text | Table
of
contents
Preface: About this book
.................................................................................................................ix
(1)
What this book is about
........................................................................................ix
(2)
Corpus and corpus database
..................................................................................
χ
(3)
Approach
..............................................................................................................xi
(4)
Genesis
...............................................................................................................xiii
(5)
Presentation
........................................................................................................xiii
(6)
Raison d être.......................................................................................................
xiv
(7)
Outline
.................................................................................................................xv
(8)
Acknowledgements
.............................................................................................xv
Conventions
..................................................................................................................................xvii
General Introduction
.........................................................................................................................1
0.
General Introduction
............................................................................................................3
0.1
Starting point I: Ancient Greek word order and the notion of colon
..........................4
0.1.1
Wackernageľs
Law (the
Р2-ШІЄ)
.............................................................................4
0.1.2
Fraenkel s notion of colon
.....................................................................................7
0.1.3
Fraenkel s colon typology
......................................................................................10
0.1.4
The status of the notion of colon
..........................................................................16
0.1.5
The Colon Hypothesis
............................................................................................17
0.2
Starting point II: the notion of Intonation Unit (IU) in discourse analysis and related
disciplines
..............................................................................................................................18
0.2.1
Intonation Units (IUs) and the analysis of spoken discourse
.................................18
0.2.2
The IU as a phonological unit
.................................................................................21
0.2.3
The IU as a cognitive unit
.......................................................................................24
0.2.4
The IU as a grammatical unit (GU)
........................................................................26
0.2.5
The IU as a pragmatic unit
.....................................................................................33
0.3
The issues
....................................................................................................................35
0.3.1
Ancient Greek word order
......................................................................................36
0.3.2
The linguistic status of the notions of colon and Intonation Unit
.....................38
0.3.3
Discourse coherence
...............................................................................................42
0.3.4
Related issues
.........................................................................................................46
(1)
Focus
....................................................................................................................46
(2)
The Ancient Greek particles
................................................................................48
(3)
Theoretical issues in general linguistics
..............................................................49
Parti: Word order rules
..................................................................................................................51
1.
Introduction to Part 1
..........................................................................................................53
1.1
Lexical determinants in Ancient Greek word order
....................................................53
1.2
Approach
.....................................................................................................................59
1.2.1
Preparing the database
............................................................................................59
1.2.2
Quantitative analysis of the corpus
.........................................................................61
1.2.3
Interpreting the quantitative data: how to deal with apparent exceptions
..............63
1.2.4
Using the database as a heuristic tool
.....................................................................64
1.3
Outline of Part I
......................................................................... ..................................65
iv
The Colon Hypothesis
2.
Prépositives, postpositives
and introductives (definitory features)
....................................67
2.0
Autonomy
....................................................................................................................67
2.1
Introductivity
................................................................................................................72
2.2
Prepositivity
.................................................................................................................77
2.3
Postpositivity
................................................................................................................79
2.4
Interactions between
prépositives
and
postpositives (/q/
vs/
/r/).................................
81
2.4.1
AV-postpositives following /pA-prepositives
...........................................................82
2.4.2
/p q
M/
(ò
μεν δείνα)
vs.
/ρ Μ
q/
(ό δείνα μεν
)....................................................85
2.4.3
The configuration
/ρ
(q...) M (q...) r/
......................................................................88
3.
Postpositives
I: clusters of
postpositives
............................................................................91
3.1
/qZ-postpositives precede AY-postpositives: /q r/, not /r q/
............................................91
3.2
Clusters of/qApostpositives
.........................................................................................93
3.3
Clusters of AV-postpositives
.........................................................................................95
4.
Postpositives
II: the
P2-rules
(Wackernageľs
Law)
..........................................................99
4.1
The
Р2-ШІЄ
for /qApostpositives
.................................................................................99
4.2
The
Р2-ШІЄ
for
AV-postpositives................................................................................107
5.
Special mobiles
................................................................................................................117
5.0
Autonomy
..................................................................................................................118
5.1
Pl-tendencies of non-lexical mobiles (preferentials)
................................................120
5.2
Verbs
..........................................................................................................................124
5.2.1
Verbs in P2
............................................................................................................125
5.2.2
Verbs in PI
............................................................................................................126
5.2.3
Verbs in P-ult
........................................................................................................129
6.
Units and formulas (review)
.............................................................................................131
6.0
Preliminary remarks
...................................................................................................131
6.1
Units
...........................................................................................................................132
6.2
Formulaic patterns
.....................................................................................................137
6.3
The position of
αν
with respect to the verb
...............................................................145
7.
Word order and the lexicon (review and conclusions)
.....................................................149
7.0
Summary of the word order rules and constraints
.....................................................149
(1)
Appositivity/autonomy constraints
....................................................................150
(2)
Adjacency constraints
........................................................................................151
(3)
Position rules
......................................................................................................152
(4)
Exceptions
..........................................................................................................153
7.1
Appositivity: phonological and morphosyntactic considerations
..............................156
7.2
The Pl-rules and the P2-rules reconsidered
...............................................................163
7.3
Segment contours: the scope of the PI and P-ult rules
..............................................166
(1)
Beginning of segment
........................................................................................166
(2)
End of segment
..................................................................................................169
(3)
Final remarks
.....................................................................................................170
8.
Conclusions to Part 1
........................................................................................................171
8.1
Categorization of the lexicon
.....................................................................................171
8.2
Word order rules
........................................................................................................172
8.3
Mechanisms underlying Ancient Greek word order
..................................................173
Part II: Discourse segmentation
...................................................................................................175
9.
Introduction to Part II
......................................................................................................177
9.1
Implementing the Colon Hypothesis: towards a more natural way of reading and
interpreting Ancient Greek
..................................................................................................177
9.2
Approach
...................................................................................................................178
9.3
Outline of Part II
........................................................................................................178
10.
Criteria for the segmentation of Ancient Greek discourse
.............................................181
10.1
Lexical segmentation criteria
...................................................................................181
10.1.1
The position of/qZ-postpositives
..........................................................................182
10.1.2
The position of ZrZ-postpositives
...........................................................................183
10.1.3
The PI-criterion
....................................................................................................185
(1)
ZOZ-introductives
................................................................................................186
(2)
Preferential ZMZ-mobiles
....................................................................................190
10.2
Grammatical segmentation criteria
..........................................................................192
10.2.1
Verb-centered clauses
...........................................................................................193
(1)
Main finite clauses and subordinate finite clauses
............................................194
(2)
Participial clauses
..............................................................................................195
(3)
Infinitival clauses
...............................................................................................195
(4)
Non-autonomous participial and infinitival clauses
..........................................196
10.2.2
Parallelism: coordinate, corresponsive and correlative structures
........................196
10.2.3
Syntactically non-integrated constituents
.............................................................198
(1)
Parentheses
........................................................................................................198
(2)
Appositions (including extrapositions, afterthoughts, resumptives)
.................198
(3)
Short (quasi-)parentheses (vocatives,
εφη,
etc.)
................................................199
10.2.4
Fronting
................................................................................................................200
(1)
Fronted Noun Phrases (NPs)
.............................................................................201
(2)
Fronted Prepositional Phrases (PPs)
..................................................................203
(3)
Fronted markers
.................................................................................................203
(4)
Fronted verbs
.....................................................................................................205
(5)
Other types of fronting (especially emphatic fronting)
.....................................206
(6)
Complex or multiple fronting
............................................................................208
10.2.5
Problems: rest-cola and short parentheses
............................................................209
(1)
Rest-cola due to parallel structures
....................................................................209
(2)
Segmentation problems involving short (quasi-Jparenthetical expressions
......210
10.3
Focus and the internal structure of the colon
...........................................................214
10.4
Discourse-related and rhetorical aspects of Ancient Greek word order
..................217
10.4.0
Bracketing phenomena ( positional frames )
.......................................................217
10.4.1
Verbs in P-ult
........................................................................................................218
10.4.2
Wide hyperbaton
...................................................................................................219
10.4.3
Parallelism and chiasmus
......................................................................................219
10.4.4
Excursus: a note on colon and
periodos
in Aristotle Rhetorica
1409-1410
and
the issue of naturalness vs. rhetorical engineering
.....................................................221
10.5
Review of the segmentation criteria
........................................................................223
11.
Segmentation of Ancient Greek text into cola
...............................................................227
vi
The Colon Hypothesis
11.0
Introduction
..............................................................................................................227
(1)
Applying the segmentation criteria
........................................................................227
(2)
Choice of excerpts
..................................................................................................228
(3)
Translations
............................................................................................................228
(4)
Presentation
............................................................................................................228
11.1
Lysias
1
ДЗ[Ь]
..........................................................................................................230
11.2
Lysias
3,15-17..........................................................................................................233
11.3
Lysias
1,15-17..........................................................................................................239
11.3.1
Lysias
1,15............................................................................................................239
11.3.2
Lysias
1,16............................................................................................................242
11.3.3
Lysias
1,17............................................................................................................247
11.4
Lysias
10,22.............................................................................................................250
11.5
Plato Sph.
2 6а-2Пе
...............................................................................................254
11.6
Plato Cra.
41
бе-41
7b
...............................................................................................261
12.
Conclusions to Part II
.....................................................................................................269
12.1
The Colon Hypothesis and the practice of segmentation
........................................269
12.2
On translating segmented Greek
.............................................................................270
12.3
Final remarks
..........................................................................................................270
Part III: Discourse coherence
.............................:..........................................................................271
13.
Introduction to Part III
...................................................................................................273
13.1
A structural and radically pragmatic approach to discourse coherence
...................273
13.1.1
Coherence as structure: the P(ragmatic)-tree device
............................................273
13.1.2
The pragmatic structure of discourse: tree geometry (adjacency, dominance,
scope), iconicity.thematization, node-types
....................................................................277
13.1.3
Pragmatic relevance and the notion of scene
.....................................................281
13.1.4
The Pragmatics First claim; the relationship between pragmatic structure and
linguistic form; syntactic sandhi
......................................................................................284
13.1.5
Focus and pragmatic structure
..............................................................................286
13.1.6
Final remarks
........................................................................................................288
13.2
Criteria for distinguishing coherence relations
........................................................288
(1)
pragmatic vs. semantic vs. syntactic
..................................................................288
(2)
binary vs. n-ary
..................................................................................................289
(3)
micro-structure vs. macro-structure
...................................................................290
(4)
± symmetrical
....................................................................................................290
(5)
± Theme-Rheme
................................................................................................290
(6)
backgrounding vs. foregrounding
......................................................................291
(7)
± content-inheritance
/
± content-percolation
....................................................291
(8)
± about
...............................................................................................................292
(9)
±
contrastive
.......................................................................................................293
(10)
intra-speaker vs. cross-speaker
........................................................................293
(11)
genre-specificness
............................................................................................294
13.3
Patterns of discourse structure: a provisional typology of coherence relations
.......295
13.3.1
Symmetrical patterns
............................................................................................296
(1)
Contrasts
............................................................................................................296
(2)
Lists and Chains
.................................................................................................297
(3)
Plots
...................................................................................................................298
13.3.2
Theme-Rheme patterns
.........................................................................................298
(1)
Marker
-
Content
...............................................................................................299
(2)
Topic
-
Comment
..............................................................................................301
(3)
Setting
-
Event
..................................................................................................303
13.3.3
Pragmatic subordination: Elaboration patterns
.....................................................304
13.3.4
Cross-speaker patterns
..........................................................................................308
13.3.5
Genre-specific
macrostructural
patterns
...............................................................312
13.3.6
Final remarks
........................................................................................................315
13.4
Approach
.................................................................................................................317
13.5
Outline of Part III
....................................................................................................318
14.
The macro-structure of a forensic speech (Lysias
1).....................................................319
14.0
Preliminary remarks
................................................................................................319
14.1
The exordium (Lysias
1,1-5)...................................................................................320
14.2
The
narratio
(Lysias l,6-28[a])
................................................................................322
14.3
The
argumentatio
(Lysias l,28[b]-46)
.....................................................................326
14.4
The
perorado
(Lysias
1,47-50)................................................................................327
14.5
Excursus: vocatives in Lysias
1...............................................................................328
14.6
Final remarks
...........................................................................................................329
15.
A simple narrative episode (Lysias
1
ДЗ[Ь])
..................................................................331
15.1
Preliminary analyses
................................................................................................332
15.2
P-tree analysis
..........................................................................................................332
15.3
Final remarks
...........................................................................................................334
16.
Another narrative episode (Lysias
3,15-17)..................................................................337
16.1
Preliminary analyses
................................................................................................338
16.2
P-tree analysis
..........................................................................................................342
16.3
Final remarks
...........................................................................................................348
17.
Reported conversation in a narrative (Lysias
1,15-17)..................................................349
17.1
Lysias
1,15...............................................................................................................349
17.2
Lysias
1,16...............................................................................................................353
17.3
Lysias
1,17...............................................................................................................359
17.4
Final remarks
...........................................................................................................363
18.
Excerpt from an
argumentatio
(Lysias
10Д2)
...............................................................365
18.1
Preliminary analyses
................................................................................................366
18.2
P-tree analysis
..........................................................................................................367
18.3
Final remarks
...........................................................................................................371
19.
A pre-sequence to a discussion (Plato Sph.
216(1-21
7b)
................................................373
19.1
Preliminary analyses
................................................................................................375
19.2
P-tree analysis
..........................................................................................................377
19.3
Final remarks
...........................................................................................................382
20.
Topic development in conversation (Plato Cra.
41
6e
-41
7b)
.........................................385
20.1
Preliminary remarks
................................................................................................387
20.2
P-tree analysis
..........................................................................................................389
20.3
Final remarks
...........................................................................................................398
21.
Aspects of the relationship between discourse structure and linguistic form
................401
viii The Colon
Hypothesis
21.1
Discourse structure and verb-centered constituents
.................................................401
(1)
Sentence closure
................................................................................................401
(2)
The alternation between verbal aspects and tenses of finite verbs
....................402
(3)
The pragmatic functions of participles in Ancient Greek (incl. verbal aspect)
.406
21.2
Grammatical shapes of the Topic-Comment pattern
...............................................408
21.3
Markers
....................................................................................................................411
21.4
Focus
........................................................................................................................419
21.5
Final remarks
...........................................................................................................422
22.
Conclusions to Part III
...................................................................................................423
22.1
The P-tree working model: basic features
..............................................................423
22.2
Towards a typology of coherence relations
............................................................425
22.3
Pragmatic structure and linguistic form
..................................................................427
22.4
Final remarks
..........................................................................................................428
General Conclusion
......................................................................................................................431
23.
General Conclusion
........................................................................................................433
23.1
Ancient Greek word order
.......................................................................................433
23.2
Discourse segmentation
...........................................................................................435
23.3
Discourse coherence
................................................................................................436
23.4
Final remarks
...........................................................................................................437
(1)
The Colon Hypothesis vs. clause- and sentence-based approaches to Ancient
Greek word order and discourse
..................................................................................437
(2)
On reading and translating Greek (incl. the oral vs. literate issue)
.............440
(3)
On pragmatic variation and genre
.....................................................................442
(4)
On editorial practice and Classical scholarship
................................................443
(5)
Final assessment
...............................................................................................444
Indices and Bibliography
..............................................................................................................447
Index of tables
..........................................................................................................................449
Index of coherence relations (ad Part III)
.................................................................................451
(1)
Symmetrical patterns
..............................................................................................451
(la) Contrasts
...............................................................................................................451
(lb) Lists and chains
....................................................................................................451
(lc) Plots
......................................................................................................................452
(2)
Theme-Rheme patterns
..........................................................................................452
(2a) Marker
-
Content
..................................................................................................452
(2b) Topic
-
Comment
.................................................................................................453
(2c) Setting
-
Event
.....................................................................................................453
(3)
Pragmatic subordination: Elaboration patterns
......................................................453
(4)
Problematic and/or idiosyncratic cases
..................................................................454
Index locorum
...........................................................................................................................455
Greek index
..............................................................................................................................461
English index
............................................................................................................................465
Index of modern authors
...........................................................................................................471
Bibliography
.............................................................................................................................473
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Scheppers, Frank |
author_facet | Scheppers, Frank |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Scheppers, Frank |
author_variant | f s fs |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV040130146 |
ctrlnum | (gbd)0993568 (OCoLC)796220846 (DE-599)HEB287247341 |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV040130146 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-12-20T16:08:47Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9789054879442 9054879440 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-024987328 |
oclc_num | 796220846 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-12 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM |
owner_facet | DE-12 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM |
physical | XVII, 484 S. graph. Darst. |
psigel | gbd_4_1206 |
publishDate | 2011 |
publishDateSearch | 2011 |
publishDateSort | 2011 |
publisher | VUBPress |
record_format | marc |
spellingShingle | Scheppers, Frank The colon hypothesis word order, discourse segmentation and discourse coherence in ancient Greek Kolon (DE-588)4508871-8 gnd Griechisch (DE-588)4113791-7 gnd Wortstellung (DE-588)4135250-6 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4508871-8 (DE-588)4113791-7 (DE-588)4135250-6 |
title | The colon hypothesis word order, discourse segmentation and discourse coherence in ancient Greek |
title_auth | The colon hypothesis word order, discourse segmentation and discourse coherence in ancient Greek |
title_exact_search | The colon hypothesis word order, discourse segmentation and discourse coherence in ancient Greek |
title_full | The colon hypothesis word order, discourse segmentation and discourse coherence in ancient Greek Frank Scheppers |
title_fullStr | The colon hypothesis word order, discourse segmentation and discourse coherence in ancient Greek Frank Scheppers |
title_full_unstemmed | The colon hypothesis word order, discourse segmentation and discourse coherence in ancient Greek Frank Scheppers |
title_short | The colon hypothesis |
title_sort | the colon hypothesis word order discourse segmentation and discourse coherence in ancient greek |
title_sub | word order, discourse segmentation and discourse coherence in ancient Greek |
topic | Kolon (DE-588)4508871-8 gnd Griechisch (DE-588)4113791-7 gnd Wortstellung (DE-588)4135250-6 gnd |
topic_facet | Kolon Griechisch Wortstellung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=024987328&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT scheppersfrank thecolonhypothesiswordorderdiscoursesegmentationanddiscoursecoherenceinancientgreek |