This study investigates reduction of 1SG possessives in possessive–noun constructions in Lancashire dialect. On the basis of a corpus of twenty-six interviews we show that reduction patterns according to (in)alienability. This dialectal evidence runs counter to the normal assumption about English, i.e. that there is no such effect. Following work by Haspelmath (2006b) that reinterprets iconicity effects in terms of frequency, we proceed to show that frequency may indeed underlie alienability/iconicity in our data as well. Relative frequency seems more useful in capturing the correlation with reduction than absolute frequency. For a few [1SG POSS-N] combinations the reduction facts are problematic for the frequency-based account we offer. Th...
This paper examines the three ways of producing a possessive pronoun in Welsh, a feature thought to ...
I provide LFG analyses for three nominal possessive constructions of modern Low Saxon, a less-studie...
Adnominal alienability splits typically involve a coding asymmetry: inalienable possessive construct...
This study investigates reduction of 1SG possessives in possessive–noun constructions in Lancashire ...
This study focuses on the grammaticalization of agreement markers from possessive pronouns, which ha...
This paper focuses on contact interaction in the development of possessive constructions. In contra...
Please be advised that this information was generated on 2016-09-18 and may be subject to change. Po...
In this paper I demonstrate how actively changing linguistic features can provide valuable evidence ...
This paper surveys data on possessive constructions in a number of languages that have been involved...
Grammatical asymmetries in possessive constructions are overtly coded in about 18% of the world’s la...
This paper presents the results of a corpus-based variationist analysis of have, have got and got in...
This paper is based on a nascent project on Lancashire dialect grammar, which aims to describe the r...
This paper deals with variation in agreement systems in English dialects. We will argue that a usage...
This thesis is concerned with structural iconicity and its effects on possessive classification. The...
In this paper, we offer an analysis for the prenominal possessor doubling construction (PPDC) as it...
This paper examines the three ways of producing a possessive pronoun in Welsh, a feature thought to ...
I provide LFG analyses for three nominal possessive constructions of modern Low Saxon, a less-studie...
Adnominal alienability splits typically involve a coding asymmetry: inalienable possessive construct...
This study investigates reduction of 1SG possessives in possessive–noun constructions in Lancashire ...
This study focuses on the grammaticalization of agreement markers from possessive pronouns, which ha...
This paper focuses on contact interaction in the development of possessive constructions. In contra...
Please be advised that this information was generated on 2016-09-18 and may be subject to change. Po...
In this paper I demonstrate how actively changing linguistic features can provide valuable evidence ...
This paper surveys data on possessive constructions in a number of languages that have been involved...
Grammatical asymmetries in possessive constructions are overtly coded in about 18% of the world’s la...
This paper presents the results of a corpus-based variationist analysis of have, have got and got in...
This paper is based on a nascent project on Lancashire dialect grammar, which aims to describe the r...
This paper deals with variation in agreement systems in English dialects. We will argue that a usage...
This thesis is concerned with structural iconicity and its effects on possessive classification. The...
In this paper, we offer an analysis for the prenominal possessor doubling construction (PPDC) as it...
This paper examines the three ways of producing a possessive pronoun in Welsh, a feature thought to ...
I provide LFG analyses for three nominal possessive constructions of modern Low Saxon, a less-studie...
Adnominal alienability splits typically involve a coding asymmetry: inalienable possessive construct...