Abstract
To make sense is to set up, through the words and their grammar, the shapes that have, just by being shaped as they are, alike DNA coding for polypeptidic chains, the power to give instructions that code, in an abridged version, for very redundant definitions. This paper shows how and why the general framework of defining matrixes allows to deal with these instructions and, namely, with the aim of accounting for the chains in discourse, to integrate into the analysis of a strictly grammatical and derivational lexical data, that of the semantics of internal arguments. Key words: Internal arguments, Matrixes, Definition, Lexicon, Grammar, Chains, Redundancy.
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