Results 71 to 80 of about 132 (118)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Related searches:
Related searches:
Acquiring Unaccusativity: A Cross-Linguistic look
2004Item does not contain ...
Angeliek van Hout, R Harald Baayen
exaly +6 more sources
Ergativity as transitive unaccusativity
Folia Linguistica, 2012The present article proposes a non-parametric approach to ergativity. It is argued that ergativity does not depend on a parametric choice, but on morphological properties of certain constructions found in a wide and varied array of languages. It is claimed (i) that the notion of ergativity should include not only canonical ergative patterns ...
exaly +2 more sources
ITL - International Journal of Applied Linguistics, 2002
Abstract Interlanguage 'novel unaccusative' (term borrowed from BALCOM 1997) has been a subject of investigation since the late 1970s, though it has usually been discussed under the terms of an interlanguage syntactic structure called the 'pseudo-passive' (e.g., SCHACHTER & RUTHERFORD 1979; RUTHERFORD 1983; YIP 1995; HAN 2000 ...
openaire +1 more source
Abstract Interlanguage 'novel unaccusative' (term borrowed from BALCOM 1997) has been a subject of investigation since the late 1970s, though it has usually been discussed under the terms of an interlanguage syntactic structure called the 'pseudo-passive' (e.g., SCHACHTER & RUTHERFORD 1979; RUTHERFORD 1983; YIP 1995; HAN 2000 ...
openaire +1 more source
2012
Abstract My research is an attempt at suggesting a cross-linguistically valid definition of verbs characterized by unagentivity and affectedness such as “burn”, “die”, “sink”, “fall”, “slide”, etc., which according to the present analysis constitute the semantic core of unaccusativity. Both synchronic and diachronic approaches are followed.
openaire +3 more sources
Abstract My research is an attempt at suggesting a cross-linguistically valid definition of verbs characterized by unagentivity and affectedness such as “burn”, “die”, “sink”, “fall”, “slide”, etc., which according to the present analysis constitute the semantic core of unaccusativity. Both synchronic and diachronic approaches are followed.
openaire +3 more sources

