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41
Negation and negative concord in AIS and ALF examples ...
Pescarini, Diego. - : Zenodo, 2022
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42
The AUTOTYP database ...
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43
Negation and negative concord in AIS and ALF examples ...
Pescarini, Diego. - : Zenodo, 2022
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44
The AUTOTYP database ...
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45
Supplementary Materials for 'Measuring and assessing indeterminacy and variation in the morphology-syntax distinction' ...
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46
Western Thrace Turkish: Phonology - Phonetic Features, Morphology and Syntax ...
Petrou, Maria. - : Zenodo, 2022
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47
Supplementary material for: "Word order constraints on event-internal modifiers" ...
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48
Western Thrace Turkish: Phonology - Phonetic Features, Morphology and Syntax ...
Petrou, Maria. - : Zenodo, 2022
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49
Supplementary Materials for 'Measuring and assessing indeterminacy and variation in the morphology-syntax distinction' ...
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50
Learning Principles in Aphasia Rehabilitation (Middleton et al., 2016) ...
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51
Learning Principles in Aphasia Rehabilitation (Middleton et al., 2016) ...
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52
Effect of proper name and pronoun order and nesting on sentence meaning ...
Ross, Hayley. - : Open Science Framework, 2022
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53
Syntactic islands in Mexican Spanish ...
Hoot, Bradley. - : Open Science Framework, 2022
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54
Syntactic islands in Spanish/English code-switching ...
Hoot, Bradley. - : Open Science Framework, 2022
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55
Contrast marking in abbreviations II ...
Wagner, Michael. - : Open Science Framework, 2022
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56
Study 1 - Fred and his dog (revised with author vs respondent conditions) ...
Shorr, Ardon. - : Open Science Framework, 2022
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57
Priming across languages and cognitive domains: The case of attachment ambiguities in English, French and German Part 2 ...
Pozniak, Céline. - : Open Science Framework, 2022
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58
Differential Object Marking in Corsican Distribution, triggers, functions. ... : Differentielle Objektmarkierung im Korsischen Verteilung, Auslöser, Funktionen ...
Neuburger, Kathrin Anne. - : Freie Universität Berlin, 2022
Abstract: The dissertation Differential Object Marking in Corsican. Distribution, triggers, functions, approaches the phenomenon of Differential Object Marking in Corsican. The phenomenon: Differential Object Marking (DOM), in its most basic and traditional conception, is the marking of certain but not all nominals in direct object (DO) function according to different semantic, syntactic and pragmatic criteria by means of an overtly expressed morphosyntactic marker. In Corsican, DOM is expressed by the morpheme à, which is homophonous to the dative and locative prepositions à, and appears with the DO if certain semantic, i.e. humanness and/or syntactic conditions, no overt definite article, apply and in turn, does not surface if these do not apply. The data: My approach is based on a corpus of empirical language data which I collected during two fieldtrips in June 2010 and September 2011. By means of a written questionnaire, I surveyed 46 informants, using a forced choice task. The results: The answers of the ... : Die Dissertation Differential Object Marking in Corsican. Distribution, triggers, functions (Differentielle Objektmarkierung im Korsischen. Distribution, Auslöser, Funktionen) beschäftigt sich mit der Differentiellen Objektmarkierung im Korsischen. Das Phänomen: Die Differentielle Objektmarkierung (DOM) beschreibt die overte morphologische Markierung – im Korsischen durch das pränominale Morphem a – bestimmter (nicht aller) direkter Objekte abhängig von Eigenschaften des Objektnomens und/oder seiner direkt umgebenden Struktur aufgrund von semantischen, syntaktischen oder pragmatischen Kriterien. Als Auslöser für DOM spielen meist Belebtheit und/oder Referentialität des Objekt-Nomens eine zentrale Rolle. Das trifft auf zahlreiche DOM-Systeme in den romanischen Sprachen zu und so auch auf das korsische. Die Daten: Für den Fragebogen habe ich Sätze aus der Literatur zur korsischen DOM übernommen, modifiziert und ergänzt. Mit Hilfe des Fragebogens habe ich im Laufe zweier Feldforschungsreisen (im Juni 2010 und ...
Keyword: 400 Sprache410 Linguistik410 Linguistik; Accusative Case Marking; Corsican; Differential Object Marking; DOM; Romance languages; Syntax
URL: https://refubium.fu-berlin.de/handle/fub188/33191
https://dx.doi.org/10.17169/refubium-32913
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59
The AMAR mechanism: nominal expressions in the Bantu languages are shaped by apposition and reintegration.
In: ISSN: 0024-3949 ; EISSN: 1613-396X ; Linguistics ; https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-03433014 ; Linguistics, De Gruyter, In press, ⟨10.1515/ling-2020-0132⟩ (2022)
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60
Context, not sequence order, affects the meaning of bonobo (Pan paniscus) gestures
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