This paper examines the omission of the relativizer ki in Subject Relative Clauses in Mauritian Creole. Recent studies have proposed that relativiser omission in Non Subject Relativisation could be explained by factors such as ambiguity avoidance, predictability (via logistic regression models) and lexical choice. Our contribution is to test the relevance of two factors that have been mentioned in the literature, namely ambiguity avoidance and determiner selection, in Subject Relativisation.
There is a morpheme li in Mauritian Creole (MC), which is homophonous with the 3sg pronoun (meaning ...
Photocopy of typescript.Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hawaii at Manoa, 1978.Bibliography: leaves 18...
It has been claimed widely that in Indonesian the most frequent type of relative clause, that formed...
International audienceThis paper examines the omission of the relativizer ki in Subject Relative Cla...
This paper examines the omission of the relativizer ki in Subject Relative Clauses in Mauritian Creo...
Publication en ligne http://www.essex.ac.uk/linguistics/department/events/langue/2007/proceedings/pa...
Publication en ligne http://www.essex.ac.uk/linguistics/department/events/langue/2007/proceedings/pa...
Two creoles of Suriname, Ndyuka and Saramaccan, are compared with each other and with Western Gbe, E...
This article provides the first systematic analysis of early subject omission in a creole language. ...
We investigate internal and stylistic factors affecting binary and ternary relativizer choice in sub...
In the early stages of creolization, a large number of French determiners incorporated into the noun...
The question of whether there exists a universal subject preference in relativization has stimulated...
On the basis of a detailed study of the relativization phenomena in the dialects of Sasak and Sumbaw...
International audienceKambaata (Highland East Cushitic) marks relative clauses in the affirmative su...
Are relative clauses formally indistinct from clausal nominalization in certain languages? This has ...
There is a morpheme li in Mauritian Creole (MC), which is homophonous with the 3sg pronoun (meaning ...
Photocopy of typescript.Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hawaii at Manoa, 1978.Bibliography: leaves 18...
It has been claimed widely that in Indonesian the most frequent type of relative clause, that formed...
International audienceThis paper examines the omission of the relativizer ki in Subject Relative Cla...
This paper examines the omission of the relativizer ki in Subject Relative Clauses in Mauritian Creo...
Publication en ligne http://www.essex.ac.uk/linguistics/department/events/langue/2007/proceedings/pa...
Publication en ligne http://www.essex.ac.uk/linguistics/department/events/langue/2007/proceedings/pa...
Two creoles of Suriname, Ndyuka and Saramaccan, are compared with each other and with Western Gbe, E...
This article provides the first systematic analysis of early subject omission in a creole language. ...
We investigate internal and stylistic factors affecting binary and ternary relativizer choice in sub...
In the early stages of creolization, a large number of French determiners incorporated into the noun...
The question of whether there exists a universal subject preference in relativization has stimulated...
On the basis of a detailed study of the relativization phenomena in the dialects of Sasak and Sumbaw...
International audienceKambaata (Highland East Cushitic) marks relative clauses in the affirmative su...
Are relative clauses formally indistinct from clausal nominalization in certain languages? This has ...
There is a morpheme li in Mauritian Creole (MC), which is homophonous with the 3sg pronoun (meaning ...
Photocopy of typescript.Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hawaii at Manoa, 1978.Bibliography: leaves 18...
It has been claimed widely that in Indonesian the most frequent type of relative clause, that formed...