Abstract

AbstractIn this article we identify and motivate the main word order patterns of adjectives in the English NP. Theoretically, we situate ourselves within the tradition of semiotically-based, cognitive-functional construction grammars as developed by such linguists as Halliday, Langacker and McGregor. In this tradition, the lexicogrammar is assumed to exist to symbolize semantic functions. We argue that the various semantic functions of adjectives in the English NP are coded by different modification relations, which differ in terms of where and how they fit into the structural assembly of the whole NP. We hold that function motivates structure, and that order is an epiphenomenon of structure. Therefore, we first set out our model of the functions that can be fulfilled by adjectives in the English NP. This model is innovative in a number of ways. Theoretically, it extends the distinction between representational and interpersonal modifiers. Descriptively, we elucidate the traditionally recognized representational functions of classifier and epithet as well as the interpersonal functions of noun-intensifier and secondary determiner. To this set, we add the hitherto barely recognized interpersonal functions of focus marker and metadesignative. We also systematically investigate the possibility for coordination and subordination between adjectives fulfilling the same function. In a second step, we then correlate this functional-structural model with the general ordering tendencies of the functions realized by adjectives. We specify the general left-to-right ordering of the six functions, pointing out possible and impossible orders of the functions relative to each other. We interpret the distinction between representational and interpersonal modifiers with regard to their different ordering potential. Finally, we look at the main ordering options available for multiple adjectives realizing the same function.

Highlights

  • This study of the order of adjectives in present-day English inserts itself in a long tradition of functional-structural analyses of the English NP, to which it is indebted both theoretically and descriptively.The theoretical tradition we affiliate with can be labelled cognitivefunctional in a broad sense

  • We assume that grammar exists to symbolize semantic functions, which constitute the “semantics of grammar” (Wierzbicka 1988)

  • We concentrate on the relation between the symbolizing and symbolized, which lies within the linguistic sign function (Hjelmslev 1961 [1943]: 23)

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Summary

Introduction

This study of the order of adjectives in present-day English inserts itself in a long tradition of functional-structural analyses of the English NP, to which it is indebted both theoretically and descriptively. The same unpleasant secondary determiner epithet congressional classifier procedure In addition to these three functions, the degree modifier function has generally been recognized, as illustrated in (1), where pure heightens the gradable features of the description paranoid fantasy to its left While the functions of classifier, epithet, degree modifier and secondary determiner have been described in the literature, there is controversy about their precise structural assembly and its relation to ordering.. From the whole structural assembly, we will derive the ordering of the functions relative to each other, as well as the main ordering principles associated with subordination and coordination within each function We will do this in the following steps.

Theoretical tenets
Semantics
Grammatical behavior
Structure
Order relative to other functions
Multiple classifiers
Multiple epithets
Multiple noun-intensifiers
Multiple secondary determiners
Multiple focus markers
Multiple metadesignatives
Findings
10 Concluding discussion
Full Text
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