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Verlag: Springer, 2001
ISBN 10: 902772315XISBN 13: 9789027723154
Anbieter: Books From California, Simi Valley, CA, USA
Buch
Hardcover. Zustand: Good.
Verlag: D. Reidel Publishing Company, Dordrecht, The Netherlands, 1987
ISBN 10: 902772315XISBN 13: 9789027723154
Anbieter: PsychoBabel & Skoob Books, Didcot, Oxfordshire, OXON, Vereinigtes Königreich
Buch Erstausgabe
hardcover. Zustand: Good. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: No Dust Jacket. First Edition. Hardcover with lightly bumped spine ends and leading corners of front board and light scratches on rear board. Name of previous owner (linguistics professor) penned on front pastedown, with her pen markings in the last chapter. Binding is sound, and text remains clear throughout. Studies in Theoretical Psycholinguistics series. T. Used.
Verlag: Dordrecht [u.a.], Publishers: Reidel, 1987., 1987
ISBN 10: 902772315XISBN 13: 9789027723154
Anbieter: Ganymed - Wissenschaftliches Antiquariat, Meldorf, Deutschland
Buch
Gr.-8°. XIX, 253 Pages. Original Flexible Boards. Ex-Library-Copy. Library-Sticker on the Spine. Library-Stamp [dropped out] on Title. Inside otherwise good Condition. No Markings in the Text! No Underlinings! No private Owner's Note! Cover only with small Signs of Usage! (Studies in theoretical psycholinguistics).
Verlag: Springer Netherlands, 1987
ISBN 10: 902772315XISBN 13: 9789027723154
Anbieter: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Deutschland
Buch
Buch. Zustand: Neu. Druck auf Anfrage Neuware - Printed after ordering - In May 1985 the University of Massachusetts held the first conference on the parameter setting model of grammar and acquisition. The conference was conceived in the belief that there is a new possibility of tightly connecting grammatical studies and language acquisition studies, and that this new possibility has grown out of the new generation of ideas about the relation of Universal Grammar to the grammar of particular languages. The papers in this volume are all concerned in one way or another with the 'parametric' model of grammar, and with its role in explaining the acquisition of language. Before summarizing the accompanying papers, I would like to sketch the intellectual background of these new ideas. It has long been the acknowledged goal of grammatical theorists to explicate the relation between the experience of the child and the knowledge of the adult. Somehow, the child selects a unique grammar (by assumption) compatible with a random partially unreliable sample of some language. In the earliest work in generative grammar, starting with Chomsky's Aspects, and extending to such works as Jackendoffs Lexicalist Syntax (1977), the model of this account was the formal evaluation metric, accompanied by a general rule writing system. The model of acquisition was the following: the child composed a grammar by writing rules in the rule writing system, under the constraint that the rules must be compatible with the data, and that the grammar must be the one most highly valued by the evaluation metric.