This paper investigates the conditions that govern the choice between the German neuter singular relative pronouns das ‘that’ and was ‘what’. We show that das requires a lexical head noun, while in all other cases was is usually the preferred option; therefore, the distribution of das and was is most successfully captured by an approach that does not treat was as an exception but analyzes it as the elsewhere case that applies when the relativizer fails to pick up a lexical gender feature from the head noun. We furthermore show how the non-uniform behavior of different types of nominalized adjectives (positives allow both options, while superlatives trigger was) can be attributed to semantic differences rooted in syntactic structure. In part...
Speakers can use pronouns when their conceptual referents are accessible from the preced-ing discour...
This paper makes clear an important distinction in relative clauses in Germanic and Romance language...
Speakers can use pronouns when their conceptual referents are accessible from the preceding discours...
The article investigates the conditions under which the w-relativizer was appears instead of the d-r...
This paper discusses the categorial status of nominalized adjectives, which share formal properties ...
Three experiments investigated the interpretation and production of pronouns in German. The first tw...
This work is part of an ongoing pilot project which analyses mixed German/ Italian relative clauses...
This article discusses relative clauses in different varieties of German, paying special attention t...
This work is part of an ongoing pilot project which analyses mixed German/ Italian relative clauses...
This work is part of an ongoing pilot project which analyses mixed German/ Italian relative clauses...
Demonstrative pronouns in German occur in various paradigms such as 'die, diese, jene, diejenige, di...
Like in most European languages, relative clauses in German an English can be divided into two major...
The article talk examines the distribution of relativising strategies in English in a cross-Germanic...
This paper presents psycholinguistic evidence on the factors governing the resolution of German pers...
This Bachelor thesis deals with the variation of the competing strong genitive endings -s and -es in...
Speakers can use pronouns when their conceptual referents are accessible from the preced-ing discour...
This paper makes clear an important distinction in relative clauses in Germanic and Romance language...
Speakers can use pronouns when their conceptual referents are accessible from the preceding discours...
The article investigates the conditions under which the w-relativizer was appears instead of the d-r...
This paper discusses the categorial status of nominalized adjectives, which share formal properties ...
Three experiments investigated the interpretation and production of pronouns in German. The first tw...
This work is part of an ongoing pilot project which analyses mixed German/ Italian relative clauses...
This article discusses relative clauses in different varieties of German, paying special attention t...
This work is part of an ongoing pilot project which analyses mixed German/ Italian relative clauses...
This work is part of an ongoing pilot project which analyses mixed German/ Italian relative clauses...
Demonstrative pronouns in German occur in various paradigms such as 'die, diese, jene, diejenige, di...
Like in most European languages, relative clauses in German an English can be divided into two major...
The article talk examines the distribution of relativising strategies in English in a cross-Germanic...
This paper presents psycholinguistic evidence on the factors governing the resolution of German pers...
This Bachelor thesis deals with the variation of the competing strong genitive endings -s and -es in...
Speakers can use pronouns when their conceptual referents are accessible from the preced-ing discour...
This paper makes clear an important distinction in relative clauses in Germanic and Romance language...
Speakers can use pronouns when their conceptual referents are accessible from the preceding discours...