Sintagmatics vs. Combinatorics: Basic Principles of Combinatorial Linguistics

The article is devoted to syntagmatics and combinatorics that form the basis of combinatorial linguistics or science of language which studies linear relations of language units and their combinatorial potential. Syntagmatics is treated as an aspect of language research, which involves the study of...

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Autor principal: M. V. Vlavatskaya
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Lenguaje:RU
Publicado: Tsentr nauchnykh i obrazovatelnykh proektov 2017
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:130eee98a20946398bbd740651b500ba2021-12-02T07:57:59ZSintagmatics vs. Combinatorics: Basic Principles of Combinatorial Linguistics2225-756X2227-1295https://doaj.org/article/130eee98a20946398bbd740651b500ba2017-01-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.nauka-dialog.ru/jour/article/view/271https://doaj.org/toc/2225-756Xhttps://doaj.org/toc/2227-1295The article is devoted to syntagmatics and combinatorics that form the basis of combinatorial linguistics or science of language which studies linear relations of language units and their combinatorial potential. Syntagmatics is treated as an aspect of language research, which involves the study of the rules of compatibility of the language units and their realization in speech. The focus is made on two linguistic phenomena: (1) valence, which is manifested at the language level and represents a potential combinability of language units, (2) compatibility, which is manifested at the level of speech and represents the realization of valency. Combinatorics is treated as making combinations of words that are subordinate to specific communicative tasks under the conditions of their implementation. The author argues that in the framework of combinatorial linguistics the syntagmatics includes forming language units in a linear sequence according to the rules of combinatorics. The limitations are commented: (1) in solving of communicative tasks (givenness of sense) (2) in terms of the implementation of this task, (3) in selecting a specific set of language units that express a given meaning. The author comes to the conclusion that syntagmatics and combinatorics equally determine the combinability of language units and are relative to each other in equipollently opposition.M. V. VlavatskayaTsentr nauchnykh i obrazovatelnykh proektovarticlecombinatoricssyntagmaticscompatibilitycontextSlavic languages. Baltic languages. Albanian languagesPG1-9665RUНаучный диалог, Vol 0, Iss 1, Pp 35-45 (2017)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language RU
topic combinatorics
syntagmatics
compatibility
context
Slavic languages. Baltic languages. Albanian languages
PG1-9665
spellingShingle combinatorics
syntagmatics
compatibility
context
Slavic languages. Baltic languages. Albanian languages
PG1-9665
M. V. Vlavatskaya
Sintagmatics vs. Combinatorics: Basic Principles of Combinatorial Linguistics
description The article is devoted to syntagmatics and combinatorics that form the basis of combinatorial linguistics or science of language which studies linear relations of language units and their combinatorial potential. Syntagmatics is treated as an aspect of language research, which involves the study of the rules of compatibility of the language units and their realization in speech. The focus is made on two linguistic phenomena: (1) valence, which is manifested at the language level and represents a potential combinability of language units, (2) compatibility, which is manifested at the level of speech and represents the realization of valency. Combinatorics is treated as making combinations of words that are subordinate to specific communicative tasks under the conditions of their implementation. The author argues that in the framework of combinatorial linguistics the syntagmatics includes forming language units in a linear sequence according to the rules of combinatorics. The limitations are commented: (1) in solving of communicative tasks (givenness of sense) (2) in terms of the implementation of this task, (3) in selecting a specific set of language units that express a given meaning. The author comes to the conclusion that syntagmatics and combinatorics equally determine the combinability of language units and are relative to each other in equipollently opposition.
format article
author M. V. Vlavatskaya
author_facet M. V. Vlavatskaya
author_sort M. V. Vlavatskaya
title Sintagmatics vs. Combinatorics: Basic Principles of Combinatorial Linguistics
title_short Sintagmatics vs. Combinatorics: Basic Principles of Combinatorial Linguistics
title_full Sintagmatics vs. Combinatorics: Basic Principles of Combinatorial Linguistics
title_fullStr Sintagmatics vs. Combinatorics: Basic Principles of Combinatorial Linguistics
title_full_unstemmed Sintagmatics vs. Combinatorics: Basic Principles of Combinatorial Linguistics
title_sort sintagmatics vs. combinatorics: basic principles of combinatorial linguistics
publisher Tsentr nauchnykh i obrazovatelnykh proektov
publishDate 2017
url https://doaj.org/article/130eee98a20946398bbd740651b500ba
work_keys_str_mv AT mvvlavatskaya sintagmaticsvscombinatoricsbasicprinciplesofcombinatoriallinguistics
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