Hi everybody,
There is also a general high quaility bibliography of syntax literature. It emerged out of my books and the books I edited for Language Science Press. My experience was that a lot of the references people use in publications are a mass. Unbelivable. Wrong information, incomplete information. So I built a latex setup with biber to check the items. Students and me checked most of the items by hand. (Including my own, which haven't been perfect either).
The result is here:
https://github.com/stefan11/grammar-references
https://www.zotero.org/groups/3005400/langsci-syntax/library
We could import the references from the LFG handbook into this. And maybe also the general LFG list of references.
Best
Stefan
Am 02.05.23 um 10:56 schrieb Koenraad de Smedt:
Dear colleagues,
In a not too distant future, the IT-department at Bergen wants to discontinue the ParGram website (https://pargram.w.uib.no https://pargram.w.uib.no/); the last updates seem to be from 2020.
There seems to be some value in the the extensive bibliography (split on different pages by year). Meanwhile, there is an LFG site at Konstanz, https://ling.sprachwiss.uni-konstanz.de/pages/home/lfg/index.html, where another extensive LFG bibliography is available. There is also a brief list of ParGram publications at https://ling.sprachwiss.uni-konstanz.de/pages/home/pargram_urdu/pargram//Pub....
However, the bibliography files on the ParGram site in Bergen contain quite a few LFG-related publications which I cannot find in the lists in Konstanz. If someone would like to get a hold of the ParGram publications and possibly merge them with the lists in Konstanz, the time to act is pretty soon.
Another potentially interesting resource is the Feature Table at https://pargram.w.uib.no/documents/feature-table-no-check/. An exported version of this table in semicolon-separated format is attached.
Best,
Koenraad De Smedt Bergen, Norway