http://glottopedia.org/index.php?title=Term_(in_relational_grammar)&feed=atom&action=historyTerm (in relational grammar) - Revision history2024-03-29T06:16:54ZRevision history for this page on the wikiMediaWiki 1.34.2http://glottopedia.org/index.php?title=Term_(in_relational_grammar)&diff=3727&oldid=prevLinguipedia: New page: In Relational Grammar, '''term''' is used for an expression bearing the grammatical relation of subject ("1"), direct object ("2"), or indirect object ("3"). Non-terms are [[obliqu...2007-09-21T10:15:53Z<p>New page: In <a href="/index.php/Relational_Grammar" title="Relational Grammar">Relational Grammar</a>, '''term''' is used for an expression bearing the <a href="/index.php/Grammatical_relation" title="Grammatical relation">grammatical relation</a> of subject ("1"), direct object ("2"), or indirect object ("3"). Non-terms are [[obliqu...</p>
<p><b>New page</b></p><div>In [[Relational Grammar]], '''term''' is used for an expression bearing the [[grammatical relation]] of subject ("1"), direct object ("2"), or indirect object ("3"). Non-terms are [[oblique(2)]]s or [[chomeur]]s (Blake 1990:1).<br />
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=== Polysemy ===<br />
The term ''term'' is also used in a technical sense to denote<br />
* a [[noun phrase]] (in Functional Grammar; see [[term (in Functional Grammar)]]).<br />
* a cover term for [[individual expression]]s and [[predicate (in logic)|predicate]]s (in formal logic; see [[term (in logic)]]).<br />
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=== Synonyms ===<br />
Term roughly corresponds to [[actant]], [[argument]], or [[complement]] in other terminological traditions. However, oblique arguments as in ''rely '''on somebody''', put the book '''on the table''''', are not terms but would be considered to be arguments or complements by most linguists who use these terms.<br />
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=== Origin ===<br />
Coined by relational grammarians in the 1970s.<br />
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=== References ===<br />
*[[Barry J. Blake|Blake, Barry J]]. 1990. ''Relational grammar.'' London: Routledge.<br />
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[[Category:Relational Grammar]]</div>Linguipedia