Difference between revisions of "Mapping Principle (in syntax)"
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In syntax, the '''Mapping Principle''' is a principle proposed in Marantz (1984) to relate independently constructed levels of representation to each other. In Marantz's model there are three levels of syntactic representation, [[logico-semantic structure]] (l-s-structure), [[syntactic structure]] (s-structure), and [[surface structure]], together with a lexicon whose lexical entries contain information about [[argument structure]], [[transitivity]], [[semantic role]]s etc. The Mapping Principle guarantees that crucial aspects of structure, specifically those relating to grammatical relations, are automatically preserved from one level to the next. | In syntax, the '''Mapping Principle''' is a principle proposed in Marantz (1984) to relate independently constructed levels of representation to each other. In Marantz's model there are three levels of syntactic representation, [[logico-semantic structure]] (l-s-structure), [[syntactic structure]] (s-structure), and [[surface structure]], together with a lexicon whose lexical entries contain information about [[argument structure]], [[transitivity]], [[semantic role]]s etc. The Mapping Principle guarantees that crucial aspects of structure, specifically those relating to grammatical relations, are automatically preserved from one level to the next. | ||
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+ | ===Related term=== | ||
+ | [[Mapping Principle (in morphology)]] | ||
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Latest revision as of 08:45, 6 October 2007
In syntax, the Mapping Principle is a principle proposed in Marantz (1984) to relate independently constructed levels of representation to each other. In Marantz's model there are three levels of syntactic representation, logico-semantic structure (l-s-structure), syntactic structure (s-structure), and surface structure, together with a lexicon whose lexical entries contain information about argument structure, transitivity, semantic roles etc. The Mapping Principle guarantees that crucial aspects of structure, specifically those relating to grammatical relations, are automatically preserved from one level to the next.
Related term
Mapping Principle (in morphology)
Link
Utrecht Lexicon of Linguistics
Reference
Marantz, Alec. 1984. On the Nature of Grammatical Relations. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.