SOV languages are said to have less rigid word order than SVO languages because they allow scrambling. This study attempts to demonstrate that the \u27freedom\u27 of SOV languages is also expressed in the weaker functional and formal constraints on preposing in these languages compared to the constraints on preposing in verb-medial languages. A comparison is made of preposing in verb-final Hindi and Kashmiri and verb-medial English. The analytical framework of Prince (1981, 1984) and Ward (1985), in which (1) the referent of the preposed constitutent of English preposing marks a salient scalar relationship to another discourse entity, itself already evoked or saliently inferable from the discourse, and (2) the preposing is \u27presuppositio...
Bangla has commonly been assumed to be an SOV wh-in-situ lan-guage. Here it is suggested that both o...
This chapter aims to find out whether preposition stranding (i.e., a preposition that appears withou...
In this study, we tested the possibility that different word orders engender different processing pr...
SOV languages are said to have less rigid word order than SVO languages because they allow scramblin...
The effective use of preverbal linguistic cues to make successful clause-final verbal prediction as ...
Until fairly recently, word order variation was assigned to factors such as, \u27taste\u27, \u27idio...
Himmelmann (2014) makes a fresh attempt at explaining the suffixing preference in the world’s langua...
Pitch lowering, avoidance of prosodic prominence, and segmental reductions in utterance-final positi...
Grammatical variation has often been said to be determined by cognitive complexity. Whenever they ha...
Abstract. The Austronesian language Chamorro has a restructuring construction in which the embedded ...
It is important to know something about what is called language typology. It is the study of why the...
This thesis attempts to explain the functions of the preposing of the direct object in Japanese. Ja...
An important account of linear ordering in syntax is John A. Hawkins' (2004) theory of cognitive eff...
This dissertation investigates fixed word order phenomena in 'free' word order languages and their c...
VP-preposed sentences in English are, contrary to earlier claims in the literature, found to be scop...
Bangla has commonly been assumed to be an SOV wh-in-situ lan-guage. Here it is suggested that both o...
This chapter aims to find out whether preposition stranding (i.e., a preposition that appears withou...
In this study, we tested the possibility that different word orders engender different processing pr...
SOV languages are said to have less rigid word order than SVO languages because they allow scramblin...
The effective use of preverbal linguistic cues to make successful clause-final verbal prediction as ...
Until fairly recently, word order variation was assigned to factors such as, \u27taste\u27, \u27idio...
Himmelmann (2014) makes a fresh attempt at explaining the suffixing preference in the world’s langua...
Pitch lowering, avoidance of prosodic prominence, and segmental reductions in utterance-final positi...
Grammatical variation has often been said to be determined by cognitive complexity. Whenever they ha...
Abstract. The Austronesian language Chamorro has a restructuring construction in which the embedded ...
It is important to know something about what is called language typology. It is the study of why the...
This thesis attempts to explain the functions of the preposing of the direct object in Japanese. Ja...
An important account of linear ordering in syntax is John A. Hawkins' (2004) theory of cognitive eff...
This dissertation investigates fixed word order phenomena in 'free' word order languages and their c...
VP-preposed sentences in English are, contrary to earlier claims in the literature, found to be scop...
Bangla has commonly been assumed to be an SOV wh-in-situ lan-guage. Here it is suggested that both o...
This chapter aims to find out whether preposition stranding (i.e., a preposition that appears withou...
In this study, we tested the possibility that different word orders engender different processing pr...