This book is a comparative study of Polish psychological verbs. The analysis concentrates on the lexicon-syntax interface of psych verbs, and constitutes an argument in favour of its strong dependence on event structure. The aim of this study is to show that the class of Polish psych verbs, as in many other languages, is not uniform. The analysed subclasses are differentiated on the basis of their causation and stativity. The marriage of those semantic traits and their structural representation is possible only if it is performed via event structure configuration, a layer which appears to underlie the conceptualisation of events.…mehr
This book is a comparative study of Polish psychological verbs. The analysis concentrates on the lexicon-syntax interface of psych verbs, and constitutes an argument in favour of its strong dependence on event structure. The aim of this study is to show that the class of Polish psych verbs, as in many other languages, is not uniform. The analysed subclasses are differentiated on the basis of their causation and stativity. The marriage of those semantic traits and their structural representation is possible only if it is performed via event structure configuration, a layer which appears to underlie the conceptualisation of events.
Produktdetails
Produktdetails
Europäische Hochschulschriften / European University Studies/Publications Universitaires Européenne 282
The Author: Adam Bialy graduated from the Institute of English Studies at the University of Wroclaw in 1998. In 2004 the author was awarded a doctoral degree in linguistics at the Philological Department of the University of Wroclaw. His research interests include lexicon-syntax interface, argument licensing, event structure and language typology.