!!Geoffrey Pullum - Selected Publications
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(1) Huddleston, Rodney and Geoffrey K. Pullum et al. (2002) The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, xvii + 1842 pp. [[Cited 5587 according to Google Scholar; widely reviewed as the best descriptive and reference grammar of English to date; winner of the annual book prize of the Linguistic Society of America]\\
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(2) Gazdar, Gerald, Ewan Klein, Geoffrey K. Pullum, and Ivan A. Sag (1985) Generalized Phrase Structure Grammar. Basil Blackwell, Oxford; Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 320 pp. [[Cited 3736] [[A foundational work for the development of non-derivational, non-transformational approaches to the formal modelling of natural language syntax.]\\
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(3) Pullum, Geoffrey K. (1991) The Great Eskimo Vocabulary Hoax and Other Irreverent Essays on the Study of Language. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, Illinois, 246 pp. [[Cited 464] [[A collection of essays designed to bring the insights of modern linguistic theory to the general public.]\\
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(4) Pullum, Geoffrey K. and Barbara C. Scholz (2002) Empirical assessment of stimulus poverty arguments. The Linguistic Review 19 (nos. 1-2), 9–50.\\
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(5) Pullum, Geoffrey K. (2011) On the mathematics of Syntactic Structures. Journal of Logic, Language and Information 20, 277–296\\
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(6) Payne, John; Geoffrey K. Pullum; Barbara C. Scholz; and Eva Berlage (2013) Anaphoric one and its implications. Language 89, 794-829. [[Cited 39]\\
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(7) Pullum, Geoffrey K. (2013) The central question in comparative syntactic metatheory. Mind and Language 28 (4), 492-521.\\
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(8) Pullum, Geoffrey K. (2015) The unfortunate divorce of English grammar from English literature. Philologist: Journal of Language, Literature and Culture, 6 (11), 9–20.\\
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(9) Pullum, Geoffrey K. (2018) Slurs and obscenities: lexicography, semantics, and philosophy. Chapter 8 of Bad Words: Philosophical Perspectives on Slurs, ed. by David Sosa, 168–192. Oxford University Press.\\
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(10) Pullum, Geoffrey K. (2018) Linguistics: Why It Matters. Cambridge: Polity Press.