Results 81 to 90 of about 147 (139)
The effect of animacy on the agent preference: Self-paced reading evidence from Basque. [PDF]
Egurtzegi A +9 more
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A phylogenetic classification of the Je language family. [PDF]
Ferraz Gerardi F +4 more
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Nominal Constructions and Split Ergativity in Chol (Mayan)
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Split Ergativity : A ”Categories and Transformations” Approach
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Diachronica, 2021
AbstractThis paper reassesses the rise of ergative alignment in Anatolian and Indo-Aryan, two branches of the Indo-European linguistic family. Both of these branches acquire split-ergative morphosyntax in the course of their history but via different grammaticalization paths and with different results.
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AbstractThis paper reassesses the rise of ergative alignment in Anatolian and Indo-Aryan, two branches of the Indo-European linguistic family. Both of these branches acquire split-ergative morphosyntax in the course of their history but via different grammaticalization paths and with different results.
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Split Ergativity is not about Ergativity
2017AbstractThis chapter argues that split ergativity is epiphenomenal, and that the factors which trigger its appearance are not limited to ergative systems in the first place. In both aspectual and person splits, the split is the result of a bifurcation of the clause into two distinct case/agreement domains, which renders the clause structurally ...
Jessica Coon, Omer Preminger
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Zeitschrift für Assyriologie und vorderasiatische Archäologie, 2008
A shared feature among ergative languages is that none are completely ergative in both morphology and syntax. In some facet of the language there is a split where the language no longer functions along ergative lines but follows a different system, often times nominative-accusative. Hurrian is no exception to the rule.
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A shared feature among ergative languages is that none are completely ergative in both morphology and syntax. In some facet of the language there is a split where the language no longer functions along ergative lines but follows a different system, often times nominative-accusative. Hurrian is no exception to the rule.
openaire +1 more source

