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ラカン☆郵便⇄ヤマト、適宜無断変更あり
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“A Generative Grammar of Japanese: The Structure of Noun Phrases” Keiichiro Okutsu / Taishukan Publishing Price: ¥3,740 This is a work that uses generative grammar to explore how the universal linguistic phenomenon called nominalization characterizes the structure of Japanese nouns and attributive modifiers. ※ There is some light soiling, yellowing, and staining. The box has some damage, rust from staples, and other stains, making it quite old. There are personal name stamps in several places. The stamps are on the box, the top edge of the book's pages, and the blank endpaper on the first page. The pages themselves show signs of aging but are otherwise clean, with no writing. Due to character limits, the table of contents below omits the chapters after Chapter 6, showing only the chapter titles. The complete table of contents can be viewed in the images. ■ Table of Contents Preface Chapter 0: Generative Grammar and Japanese Chapter 1: Base Rules Chapter 2: Attributive Modification Sentences ――Between Words and Particles―― 1. Descriptive Sentences as Attributive Modification Sentences 2. The "Conceptual Process" in Tokieda Grammar 3. Husserl's Analysis 4. A Neurophysiological Approach 5. A Formal Linguistic Approach 6. On Statements - Sentence Pause Elements - 7. Style Elements are Neither Words nor Particles 8. Sentence-Initial Words and Sentence-Final Words 9. Predicates and Attributive Modification Structures 10. Adverbial Modification Parts and Attributive Modification Structures 11. Why Attributive Modification Sentences are the Standard for Distinguishing Words and Particles 12. Between Words and Particles Chapter 3: General Characteristics of Identical Noun Attributive Modification Structures 1. Flat Structures 2. Nouns and Case Markers 3. Conditions for Noun Identity in Attributive Modification 4. Iterative Generation of Attributive Modification Structures 5. Identical Noun Deletion Transformation 6. Deletion of Case Particles Chapter 4: Modified Nouns ――What Can Be Attributively Modified―― 1. Elements That Cannot Be Modified Nouns - What is Not a Noun - 2. Elements That Can Be Modified Nouns - What is a Noun - 3. So-called Secondary Particles and Binding Particles and Modified Nouns ――Quantifiers, Coordinating Particles, and Focusing Particles―― Chapter 5: Added Noun Attributive Modification 1. Added Attributive Nouns 2. Relative Nouns and Attributive Complement Phrases 3. Appositive Attributive Nouns 4. Restrictions on Complement Phrases 5. Non-Application of Iteration Rules 6. Distribution of Complement Phrases 7. On So-called Formal Nouns 8. Universal and Specific Quantification of Nouns 9. Vertical Selection Features and Quantitative Restrictions on Nouns Chapter 6: Relative Nouns Chapter 7: Appositive Attributive Nouns 【For Management】 5955G2674 Thickness 2.9
6 months ago