Difference between revisions of "Stratificational ordering"
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Latest revision as of 06:37, 8 October 2017
The name stratificational ordering is intended to suggest that a language has several layers of structure. These may be thought of as existing on top of one another, as it were. In a stratificational framework one views the entire structure as present at one time, and one encounters different structural layers or levels instead of different derivational periods in a fictional time span. We speak of these various levels as differing from one another in height. Higher levels are closer to meaning, lower levels are closer to expression.
See Also
Sources
- "Some Types of Ordering", in Language and Reality: Selected Writings of Sydney Lamb, Continuum, 2004.