Results 131 to 140 of about 1,131 (229)

La subordonnée interrogative en anglais contemporain

open access: yes, 2000
Publiée dans une version écourtée aux Presses Universitaires de Provence (PUP), 2004This PhD is a study of subordinate interrogative clauses (SICs) and of the other types of clauses starting with a WH- word (free relative clauses, subordinate exclamative
Leonarduzzi, Laetitia
core  

Spores of Displacement: Legal Geographies of Mould, Evidence and Housing Precarity

open access: yesTransactions of the Institute of British Geographers, Volume 51, Issue 2, June 2026.
Short Abstract This article develops a legal geography of mould by examining how damp and disrepair become legal, evidentiary and spatial objects within rental disputes and eviction proceedings in Germany. Drawing on ethnographic research across more than 200 district court hearings, it shows how mould enters the courtroom not primarily as a ...
Sarah Klosterkamp
wiley   +1 more source

WH-words are not ‘interrogative’ pronouns : the derivation of interrogative interpretations for constituent questions

open access: yes, 2010
I discuss the status of WH-words for interrogative interpretations, and show that the derivation of constituent questions evolves from a specific interplay of syntactic and semantic representations with pragmatics.
Wiese, Heike
core  

Embedding without a license?: typology of unselected embedded clauses

open access: yes, 2018
Tomioka, SatoshiThis thesis brings to light three kinds of adjunct clauses in Japanese/Korean (JP/KR)—two kinds of interrogative clauses and one kind of quotative clauses.
Kim, Jooyoung
core   +1 more source

Parentheticals / von Dehé, Nicole / Reduced parenthetical clauses in Romance languages. A pragmatic typology

open access: yes, 2007
The article derives from a corpus study of reduced parenthetical clauses (RPCs) in contemporary spoken French, Italian, and Spanish (cf. Schneider, forthcoming) and proposes a typology based on pragmatic criteria.
Stefan Schneider, Schneider, Stefan
core   +1 more source

The acceptability of interrogative pronouns in free relative clauses:a puzzle in Reunion Creole

open access: yes
This article explores the acceptability of two interrogative pronouns, kisa ‘who’ and kosa ‘what’, in free relative clauses in Reunion Creole. Across the languages of the world, free relative pronouns are often identical to interrogative pronouns in a ...
Mclellan, Alina; id_orcid
core   +1 more source

Tonal properties in a non-tonal language: The case of Indonesian. [PDF]

open access: yesHeliyon, 2023
Udayana IN   +3 more
europepmc   +1 more source

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