The purpose of this article is to argue against the necessity of positing a process of "Scrambling " in accounting for Russian "free " word order. * Instead, I argue that there is an unmarked order (SVO) and two distinct kinds of reordering processes, both familiar from other languages, and that current advances in linguistic theory allow us to tease the two apart, to se
This thesis is concerned with NP/DP argument reordering and the question of what licenses it formall...
There is a longstanding debate about how to appropriately model the combinability of affixes, especi...
Although the linear order of arguments (and adverbials) in German is relatively free, it underlies c...
This article argues against two recent non-movement accounts of free word order in Russian – van Gel...
The central issue in current work on sentence processing is to explain how readers and listeners rec...
Progrsss in Linguistics is often made by applying results from one area to a different domain of inq...
This article argues against cascades of information-structural functional heads in the German middle...
UnrestrictedThis work investigates the issue of optionality in derivation and interpretation in scra...
Grammars are decomposable. On the one hand, an adequate characterization of a given utterance factor...
In this paper we investigate the role of specificity and definiteness in a ‘free-word-order’, articl...
This paper documents certain quantifier scope ambiguities in Russian and argues that these are deriv...
There is a longstanding debate about how to appropriately model the combinability of affixes, especi...
This paper provides a comprehensive discussion of both the empirical nature and the theoretical impl...
This thesis proposes that there is a form of scrambling in Ukrainian that involves pervasive phonolo...
The purpose of this study is twofold: first, to collate a method for dealing with word-order and fu...
This thesis is concerned with NP/DP argument reordering and the question of what licenses it formall...
There is a longstanding debate about how to appropriately model the combinability of affixes, especi...
Although the linear order of arguments (and adverbials) in German is relatively free, it underlies c...
This article argues against two recent non-movement accounts of free word order in Russian – van Gel...
The central issue in current work on sentence processing is to explain how readers and listeners rec...
Progrsss in Linguistics is often made by applying results from one area to a different domain of inq...
This article argues against cascades of information-structural functional heads in the German middle...
UnrestrictedThis work investigates the issue of optionality in derivation and interpretation in scra...
Grammars are decomposable. On the one hand, an adequate characterization of a given utterance factor...
In this paper we investigate the role of specificity and definiteness in a ‘free-word-order’, articl...
This paper documents certain quantifier scope ambiguities in Russian and argues that these are deriv...
There is a longstanding debate about how to appropriately model the combinability of affixes, especi...
This paper provides a comprehensive discussion of both the empirical nature and the theoretical impl...
This thesis proposes that there is a form of scrambling in Ukrainian that involves pervasive phonolo...
The purpose of this study is twofold: first, to collate a method for dealing with word-order and fu...
This thesis is concerned with NP/DP argument reordering and the question of what licenses it formall...
There is a longstanding debate about how to appropriately model the combinability of affixes, especi...
Although the linear order of arguments (and adverbials) in German is relatively free, it underlies c...