Object shift in Scandinavian and scrambling in West Germanic have the same information-structural trigger - but differ in a number of respects. Most accounts of these phenomena thus assume that object shift and scrambling are different operations. The present paper tries to explore the ramification of a unified account in which language specific pecularities are related to different properties in the mapping between syntactic structure and prosodic structure
This article argues against cascades of information-structural functional heads in the German middle...
This study investigates two word order phenomena in Norwegian heritage language spoken in the US, su...
This paper provides a comprehensive discussion of both the empirical nature and the theoretical impl...
Object shift in Scandinavian and scrambling in West Germanic have the same information-structural tr...
Object shift (OS) is a word order phenomenon in Scandinavian languages where under some circumstance...
The thesis discusses Object Shift, weak pronoun shift in the Scandinavian languages, from the intona...
Holmberg\u27s Generalization (Holmberg 1986) was originally stated to describe the object shift ph...
Holmberg’s Generalization (Holmberg 1986) was originally stated to describe the “object shift” pheno...
Dutch is typically known to allow scrambling. Finnish on the other hand has a flexible word order. E...
In this paper I demonstrate that in Mòcheno, a German dialect spoken in Northern Italy, scrambling, ...
The fact that object shift only affects weak pronouns in mainland Scandinavian is seen as an instanc...
In this paper I demonstrate that in Mòcheno, a German dialect spoken in Northern Italy, scrambling, ...
Recent work on Object Shift (OS) suggests that this is not as uniform an operation as traditionally ...
This paper addresses the role of the adverb in Dutch direct object scrambling constructions. We repo...
This article argues against cascades of information-structural functional heads in the German middle...
This study investigates two word order phenomena in Norwegian heritage language spoken in the US, su...
This paper provides a comprehensive discussion of both the empirical nature and the theoretical impl...
Object shift in Scandinavian and scrambling in West Germanic have the same information-structural tr...
Object shift (OS) is a word order phenomenon in Scandinavian languages where under some circumstance...
The thesis discusses Object Shift, weak pronoun shift in the Scandinavian languages, from the intona...
Holmberg\u27s Generalization (Holmberg 1986) was originally stated to describe the object shift ph...
Holmberg’s Generalization (Holmberg 1986) was originally stated to describe the “object shift” pheno...
Dutch is typically known to allow scrambling. Finnish on the other hand has a flexible word order. E...
In this paper I demonstrate that in Mòcheno, a German dialect spoken in Northern Italy, scrambling, ...
The fact that object shift only affects weak pronouns in mainland Scandinavian is seen as an instanc...
In this paper I demonstrate that in Mòcheno, a German dialect spoken in Northern Italy, scrambling, ...
Recent work on Object Shift (OS) suggests that this is not as uniform an operation as traditionally ...
This paper addresses the role of the adverb in Dutch direct object scrambling constructions. We repo...
This article argues against cascades of information-structural functional heads in the German middle...
This study investigates two word order phenomena in Norwegian heritage language spoken in the US, su...
This paper provides a comprehensive discussion of both the empirical nature and the theoretical impl...