This is the second Volume of a two-Volume work that introduces a new and fundamentally different conception of language structure and linguistic investigation.
In contrast to current orthodoxy, the author argues that grammar is not autonomous with respect to semantics, but rather reduces to patterns for the structuring and symb. form-meaning pairings).
The central claim of Cognitive grammar is that grammar forms a continuum with lexicon and is fully describable in terms of symbolic units (i.e.
This is the second Volume of a two-Volume work that introduces a new and fundamentally different conception of language structure and linguistic investigation