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Re: Часть 2 

metanymous в посте Metapractice (оригинал в ЖЖ)

(8) Lakoff, G. Linguistics and Natural Logic. Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 1970.
A valuable compendium of some of the more recent work in Generative Semantics by it`s most prolific spokesperson. G. Lakoff is presently at the University of California, Berkeley.
(9) McCawley, J. "Lexical Insertion in a Transformational Grammar." In Papers from the 4th Regional Meeting of the Chicago Linguistic Society. Chicago, Ill.: University of Chicago, 1968.
One of the initial articles establishing Generative Semantics; good suggestions about the representation of reference structures.
(10) Postal, P. "On the Derivation of Pseudo-Adjectives." Paper delivered to the 44th Annual Meeting of the LSA, 1969.
Postal, P. "On the Surface Verb Remind." In Linguistic Inquiry, 7; 1 :37-120. Postal's work is highly theoretical; the first reference has excellent examples of the patterns of derivation as Deep Structure Predicates are mapped into Surface Structure Adjectives. The second reference is very useful in making suggestions about the representation of reference structures.
(11) Ross, J. R. "On Declarative Sentences." In R. Jacobs and P. Rosen baum, Readings in English Transformational Grammar. Waltham, Mass.: Ginn/Blaisdell, 1970.
This is the linguistic basis for the section in Chapter 4 called The Last Performative and an excellent example of linguistic analysis.
(12) Sapir, E. The Selected Writing of Edward Sapir. D. Mandelbaum (ed.). University of California Press, Berkeley, 1963.
One of the classical linguists who had a fine sensitivity for modeling.
(13) Searle, J. Speech Acts. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1969.
A modern work in pragmatics with the transformational model as a basis. Readable.
(14) Whorf, B. "Grammatical Categories." In J . E. Carroll (ed.), Language, Thought and Reality. New York: John Wiley and Sons, 1956.
Another classical linguist who addressed the issue of the way language shapes perception.