Affiliation:
1. LLACAN, CNRS, Sorbonne-Paris Cité & INALCO
Abstract
Abstract
Transcategorial morphemes share the common ability to be used synchronically across different syntactic categories (synchronic
grammaticalization). This paper first shows that transcategoriality is a general property of linguistic systems, variously
exploited by languages, then addresses the theoretical questions raised by these morphemes. A new model accounting for this
transcategorial functioning, named “fractal grammar”, is proposed and illustrated by various examples. The analysis for this
particular functioning relates the polysemy of these morphemes to their syntactic flexibility in a dynamic way: the variation of
the syntactic scope of the morpheme (“fractal functioning”) is triggered by its environment and produces its polysemy (variation
of the semantic scope). Fractal grammar is thus defined by two basic mechanisms: the construal of a common image-schema (“scale
invariance”), accounting for the unity of the morpheme, and the activation of “scale (or level) properties”, accounting for the
semantic and syntactic variations. A typological sketch of transcategoriality is then sketched, in relation to the strategies used
by linguistic systems for the distribution of grammatical information. Three types of transcategorial strategies are
distinguished: “oriented”, “generic”, and “functional” transcategoriality. The status of linguistic categories is then discussed
in the light of the analysis of these particular morphemes.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
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