For a long time one of the most bewildering conundrums of Indo-European linguistics has been the issue of how to reconstruct the alignment system of this ancient language state, given the lack of distinction between s and o marking in the Proto-Indo-European neuter nouns and the problem of the Hittite ergative. An additional complication stems from the existence of argument structure constructions where the subject(-like) argument is marked in a different case than the nominative, like the accusative or the dative. Our aim with the present article is to fill two needs with one deed and offer a unified account of this century-long bone of contention. In contribution to the ongoing discussion in the field, we claim that a semantic alignment s...
A subject analysis of oblique subject-like arguments remains controversial even across modern langua...
The typological literature reports only one of two logically possible types of Case-agreement mismat...
This paper contributes to an ongoing debate on the syntactic status of oblique subject-like NPs in t...
For a long time one of the most bewildering conundrums of Indo-European linguistics has been the iss...
This article addresses the variable alignment properties of experiencer constructions in Indo-Aryan ...
Item does not contain fulltextThe nominative/accusative to ergative/absolutive shift in Indo-Aryan h...
New Indo-Aryan languages are characterized by accusative (DOM) objects in ergative, perfective claus...
The paper outlines a diachronic typology of changes in case systems within the Indo-European linguis...
The present paper outlines a diachronic typology of changes in case systems within the Indo-European...
According to a widespread view, adjectives developed out of nouns in Proto-Indo-European, as shown b...
Abstract This article investigates a peculiar pattern of subject case-marking in the Greek of so...
This thesis presents a description and analysis of non-canonical case-marking of core arguments in L...
In this paper, I will discuss the origin of the different nominal accent-ablaut paradigms that can b...
A subject analysis of oblique subject-like arguments remains controversial even across the modern la...
This thesis presents a description and analysis of non-canonical case-marking of core arguments in L...
A subject analysis of oblique subject-like arguments remains controversial even across modern langua...
The typological literature reports only one of two logically possible types of Case-agreement mismat...
This paper contributes to an ongoing debate on the syntactic status of oblique subject-like NPs in t...
For a long time one of the most bewildering conundrums of Indo-European linguistics has been the iss...
This article addresses the variable alignment properties of experiencer constructions in Indo-Aryan ...
Item does not contain fulltextThe nominative/accusative to ergative/absolutive shift in Indo-Aryan h...
New Indo-Aryan languages are characterized by accusative (DOM) objects in ergative, perfective claus...
The paper outlines a diachronic typology of changes in case systems within the Indo-European linguis...
The present paper outlines a diachronic typology of changes in case systems within the Indo-European...
According to a widespread view, adjectives developed out of nouns in Proto-Indo-European, as shown b...
Abstract This article investigates a peculiar pattern of subject case-marking in the Greek of so...
This thesis presents a description and analysis of non-canonical case-marking of core arguments in L...
In this paper, I will discuss the origin of the different nominal accent-ablaut paradigms that can b...
A subject analysis of oblique subject-like arguments remains controversial even across the modern la...
This thesis presents a description and analysis of non-canonical case-marking of core arguments in L...
A subject analysis of oblique subject-like arguments remains controversial even across modern langua...
The typological literature reports only one of two logically possible types of Case-agreement mismat...
This paper contributes to an ongoing debate on the syntactic status of oblique subject-like NPs in t...