Difference between revisions of "Stratificational Grammar"

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'''Stratificational grammar''' -- called ''stratificational'' because one of its chief features is its treatment of linguistic structure as comprising several structural layers or ''strata'' -- aims to provide for any language an explicit description of a part of the connection between meaning and sound, a grammar consisting of a [[realizational portion]] which provides the direct link between any given configuration in the area of meaning and a corresponding configuration in the area of articulation/audition;  [[tactic pattern]]s in which the signals of the communication process pass through coding filters that restructure them;  [[alternation pattern]]s -- of which there are usually two, an ''upper'' and a ''lower'', associated with each tactic pattern -- made up of various choice and merger points in the connections;  and below each lower alternation pattern a [[sign pattern]], which specifies the constituent segments at that level.
 
'''Stratificational grammar''' -- called ''stratificational'' because one of its chief features is its treatment of linguistic structure as comprising several structural layers or ''strata'' -- aims to provide for any language an explicit description of a part of the connection between meaning and sound, a grammar consisting of a [[realizational portion]] which provides the direct link between any given configuration in the area of meaning and a corresponding configuration in the area of articulation/audition;  [[tactic pattern]]s in which the signals of the communication process pass through coding filters that restructure them;  [[alternation pattern]]s -- of which there are usually two, an ''upper'' and a ''lower'', associated with each tactic pattern -- made up of various choice and merger points in the connections;  and below each lower alternation pattern a [[sign pattern]], which specifies the constituent segments at that level.
  
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*Christie Jr, William M. 1977. ''A Stratificational View of Linguistic Change''. Lake Bluff IL: Jupiter Press.
 
*Christie Jr, William M. 1977. ''A Stratificational View of Linguistic Change''. Lake Bluff IL: Jupiter Press.
*Lamb, Sydney M. 1966. ''Outline of Stratificational Grammar''.  Washington DC: Georgetown University Press.
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*[[Sydney M. Lamb|Lamb, Sydney M.]] 1966. ''Outline of Stratificational Grammar''.  Washington DC: Georgetown University Press.
  
 
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[[Category:En]]
 
[[Category:En]]
 
[[Category:Grammar]]
 
[[Category:Grammar]]
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[[Category:Framework]]

Revision as of 08:04, 26 November 2007

Stratificational grammar -- called stratificational because one of its chief features is its treatment of linguistic structure as comprising several structural layers or strata -- aims to provide for any language an explicit description of a part of the connection between meaning and sound, a grammar consisting of a realizational portion which provides the direct link between any given configuration in the area of meaning and a corresponding configuration in the area of articulation/audition; tactic patterns in which the signals of the communication process pass through coding filters that restructure them; alternation patterns -- of which there are usually two, an upper and a lower, associated with each tactic pattern -- made up of various choice and merger points in the connections; and below each lower alternation pattern a sign pattern, which specifies the constituent segments at that level.

Related Terms

  • neurocognitive linguistics
  • relational network grammar

References

  • Christie Jr, William M. 1977. A Stratificational View of Linguistic Change. Lake Bluff IL: Jupiter Press.
  • Lamb, Sydney M. 1966. Outline of Stratificational Grammar. Washington DC: Georgetown University Press.