SAY-COMPLEMENTIZERS IN SINITIC LANGUAGES
I treat the pathway of grammaticalization which leads to reanalysis of SAY verbs as the category of the complementizer in the case of Sinitic languages, casting an eye over the wider areal and crosslinguistic perspective. Each stage in this grammaticalization process is established in turn and a comparison made between Chinese dialects in terms of ...
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Lexical data for the historical comparison of Rgyalrongic languages. [PDF]
Lai Y, List JM.
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A comitative source for object markers in Sinitic languages: <i>kai<sup>55</sup></i> in Waxiang and <i>kang<sup>7</sup></i> in Southern Min. [PDF]
Chappell H, Peyraube A, Wu Y.
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Breaking the mould, a first parse at natural language processing in aspergillosis diagnosis. [PDF]
Pates KM +3 more
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The Small and Efficient Language Network of Polyglots and Hyper-polyglots. [PDF]
Jouravlev O +3 more
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Two Languages and One Aphasia: A Systematic Scoping Review of Primary Progressive Aphasia in Chinese Bilingual Speakers, and Implications for Diagnosis and Clinical Care. [PDF]
Han W, Zhou L, Lu J, Pill S.
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Dated phylogeny suggests early Neolithic origin of Sino-Tibetan languages. [PDF]
Zhang H, Ji T, Pagel M, Mace R.
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Temperature shapes language sonority: Revalidation from a large dataset. [PDF]
Wang T, Wichmann S, Xia Q, Ran Q.
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Patrilineages of ethnolinguistically diverse populations reveal multifactorial influences on Chinese paternal population stratification. [PDF]
Yang T +11 more
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