With the exception of Icelandic and to some extent Faroese, Stylistic Fronting has disappeared from Scandinavian varieties. It is commonly assumed that even in Icelandic it is formal and old fashioned, indicating that it might be on its way out of this language as well. However, this has not been substantiated or supported by frequency surveys in large written language corpora. This paper studies the distribution and frequency of Stylistic Fronting in two written language corpora, Timarit.is and the World Wide Web, across two distinct SF domains: Subject relatives and subjectless impersonal (mostly adverbial) clauses. The survey yields support to the common assumption that SF is on the retreat. In relative clauses verb-initial order (V1) se...
This chapter evaluates the proposal, originally made by Anders Holmberg and Christer Platzack (e.g. ...
This paper addresses the issue of optionality in complementizer insertion/drop and related subject-o...
This dissertation discusses aspects of the syntax of Övdalian, a variety spoken by ca. 2,500 people ...
With the exception of Icelandic and to some extent Faroese, Stylistic Fronting has disappeared from ...
Stylistic Fronting (SF) is a process that fronts various types of non-subjects to the preverbal posi...
This paper presents a novel analysis of the discourse properties of the phenomenon called "Stylistic...
This paper presents a novel analysis of the discourse properties of the phenomenon called "Stylistic...
In the two papers presented here, I deal with fronting constructions in Icelandic, in particular Sub...
The occurrence of V1 declaratives in Icelandic has attracted much attention in the generative litera...
The occurrence of V1 declaratives in Icelandic has attracted much attention in the generative litera...
The occurrence of V1 declaratives in Icelandic has attracted much attention in the generative litera...
In this paper I present a base-generated analysis of Stylistic Fronting in Icelandic, assimilating t...
The thesis discusses three morphosyntactic changes in Danish, Faroese, Norwegian, Swedish and Englis...
Across the Germanic language family, we find a type of movement traditionally termed topicalization,...
Across the Germanic language family, we find a type of movement traditionally termed topicalization,...
This chapter evaluates the proposal, originally made by Anders Holmberg and Christer Platzack (e.g. ...
This paper addresses the issue of optionality in complementizer insertion/drop and related subject-o...
This dissertation discusses aspects of the syntax of Övdalian, a variety spoken by ca. 2,500 people ...
With the exception of Icelandic and to some extent Faroese, Stylistic Fronting has disappeared from ...
Stylistic Fronting (SF) is a process that fronts various types of non-subjects to the preverbal posi...
This paper presents a novel analysis of the discourse properties of the phenomenon called "Stylistic...
This paper presents a novel analysis of the discourse properties of the phenomenon called "Stylistic...
In the two papers presented here, I deal with fronting constructions in Icelandic, in particular Sub...
The occurrence of V1 declaratives in Icelandic has attracted much attention in the generative litera...
The occurrence of V1 declaratives in Icelandic has attracted much attention in the generative litera...
The occurrence of V1 declaratives in Icelandic has attracted much attention in the generative litera...
In this paper I present a base-generated analysis of Stylistic Fronting in Icelandic, assimilating t...
The thesis discusses three morphosyntactic changes in Danish, Faroese, Norwegian, Swedish and Englis...
Across the Germanic language family, we find a type of movement traditionally termed topicalization,...
Across the Germanic language family, we find a type of movement traditionally termed topicalization,...
This chapter evaluates the proposal, originally made by Anders Holmberg and Christer Platzack (e.g. ...
This paper addresses the issue of optionality in complementizer insertion/drop and related subject-o...
This dissertation discusses aspects of the syntax of Övdalian, a variety spoken by ca. 2,500 people ...