Template: Macrosyntax: Difference between revisions
From Psalms: Layer by Layer
Amanda.Jarus (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
Amanda.Jarus (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 50: | Line 50: | ||
|<span style="color:#808080">(text to elucidate the meaning of the macrosyntactic structures)</span>||Within the CBC, any '''text elucidating the meaning of macrosyntax''' is indicated in gray text inside parentheses. | |<span style="color:#808080">(text to elucidate the meaning of the macrosyntactic structures)</span>||Within the CBC, any '''text elucidating the meaning of macrosyntax''' is indicated in gray text inside parentheses. | ||
|} | |} | ||
{{Emendations}} | |||
</div> | </div> | ||
</includeonly> | </includeonly> |
Revision as of 12:20, 28 March 2025
This includes the exact HTML to be included in the grammatical legend portion of each Grammar page.
Macrosyntax Table
(For more information, click "Macrosyntax Legend" below.)
- ↑ When the entire utterance is new/unexpected, it is a thetic sentence (often called "sentence focus"). See our Creator Guidelines for more information on topic and focus.
- ↑ Frame setters are any orientational constituent – typically, but not limited to, spatio-temporal adverbials – function to "limit the applicability of the main predication to a certain restricted domain" and "indicate the general type of information that can be given" in the clause nucleus (Krifka & Musan 2012: 31-32). In previous scholarship, they have been referred to as contextualizing constituents (see, e.g., Buth (1994), “Contextualizing Constituents as Topic, Non-Sequential Background and Dramatic Pause: Hebrew and Aramaic evidence,” in E. Engberg-Pedersen, L. Falster Jakobsen and L. Schack Rasmussen (eds.) Function and expression in Functional Grammar. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, 215-231; Buth (2023), “Functional Grammar and the Pragmatics of Information Structure for Biblical Languages,” in W. A. Ross & E. Robar (eds.) Linguistic Theory and the Biblical Text. Cambridge: Open Book Publishers, 67-116), but this has been conflated with the function of topic. In brief: sentence topics, belonging to the clause nucleus, are the entity or event about which the clause provides a new predication; frame setters do not belong in the clause nucleus and rather provide a contextual orientation by which to understand the following clause.