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Date: | Wed, 29 Sep 2004 16:51:20 -0700 |
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I find Herb's introduction of the deixis ("pointing") function vs. the
reference function extremely important in this discussion. I don't feel
at all comfortable calling 'his' a pronoun! It's prototypical function
is determining, not referring. It can function as a nominal, as in
"Let's take his." But note that this likely has its source in ellipsis.
Why not talk about determinatives acting as nominals instead of the
other way around? Reference is criterial for nominals; my thinking is
heading towards the idea that we call something a nominal _because_ it
refers.
Words like 'his' are not pronouns because they refer to an antecedent;
they are CO-referent. They index a noun somewhere nearby and relate it
to another noun; they are relational, not nominal. In "this book",
"book" is the head of the nominal phrase; there are not two nominals (a
pronoun and a noun) here. "This" is a proximal (near to speaker) deictic
(pointing) determinative.
I don't know how widespread the acceptance of the new Cambrdge grammar's
categorization scheme is. It definitely seems to favor keeping a single
category name across a range of functions. I think it is more radical in
this respect than other recent linguistic theory.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Johanna Rubba Associate Professor, Linguistics
English Department, California Polytechnic State University
One Grand Avenue • San Luis Obispo, CA 93407
Tel. (805)-756-2184 • Fax: (805)-756-6374 • Dept. Phone. 756-2596
• E-mail: [log in to unmask] • Home page:
http://www.cla.calpoly.edu/~jrubba
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