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Acquisition of Japanese relative clauses by L1 Chinese learners: Evidence from reflexive pronoun resolution

Second Language Research, 2020
This article investigates whether first-language (L1) Chinese-speaking learners of Japanese as a second language (L2) can acquire the knowledge that the reflexive pronoun jibun ‘self’ within the head noun phrase of Japanese relative clauses cannot refer ...
Yunchuan Chen
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Reflexive or Not? Choosing a Possessive in Bulgarian, Czech, and Russian

Scando-Slavica, 2023
This article investigates the competition between reflexive and non-reflexive possessive pronouns in 1PSG contexts in Bulgarian, Czech, and Russian. Using comparable web corpora, I assessed the distributional frequencies of both possessives and, drawing ...
Tatiana Perevozchikova
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The reflexive cycle

Journal of Uralic Linguistics, 2022
Starting from a morphosyntactic puzzle of the Ugric and Samoyedic languages of the Uralic family (possessive agreement suffixes functioning as accusative allomorphs on pronominal objects), this paper identifies a pronoun cycle which leads from ...
K. Kiss, N. Mus
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Reflexive Pronoun Deixis in Harry Bradbeer’s “Enola Holmes 2 (2022)” Movie

Edulitics (Education, Literature, and Linguistics) Journal
Deixis is referring to something depending on the speaker's and addressee's current time, location, and context through an utterance. In this study, the writer focused on the analysis of the reflexive pronoun deixis. The aims of the study are to find out
A. Ahmad   +2 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Discourse effects in processing Chinese reflexive pronouns

Linguistics Vanguard
Reflexive pronoun resolution in Chinese is well known to be affected by discourse context, as antecedent choice can be guided to a long-distance or local antecedent.
Yue Zhao, Darcy Sperlich
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Untriggered Reflexive Pronouns in English

American Speech, 1990
The focus of our discussion, in contrast, is a phenomenon that has received less attention, namely the UNTRIGGERED reflexive (UR): that is, a reflexive that speakers find generally acceptable even though it is not coreferential with another NP. In the following analysis, we attempt to explain four distributional properties of UR's. First, UR's that are
Frank Parker   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Null Subjects Are Reflexives, Not Pronouns

2007
It has been a prevalent assumption in the literature that phonetically null Subjects of finite clauses are pronouns. This paper examines in detail this empirical generalization and argues that null Subjects are reflexives rather than pronouns. The critical point at stake here, which has obscured appropriate classification, is that null Subjects are ...
openaire   +1 more source

Reflexive pronouns in the Lindisfarne glosses

NOWELE. North-Western European Language Evolution, 2019
AbstractOld English uses personal pronouns, demonstratives, and limited null subject for reference to previously mentioned nouns. It uses personal pronouns reflexively and pronouns modified by ‘self’ identical in form with an intensive. This use of a pronoun modified byselfhas been attributed to British Celtic influence. Other changes in the pronominal
openaire   +1 more source

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