This article provides a critical examination of the widespread idea that A and O (and Agents and Patients) are each other's mirror image in terms of case marking and semantic features. We examine patterns of differential case marking for nouns in a sample of 185 languages, showing that the behaviour of A cannot be captured in terms of markedness reversal based on models for O marking. We highlight pecularities of A marking that are not found with O marking, like sensitivity to the feature of motivity, and syntactic restrictions on use as A, and use these to develop an independent account of A marking.status: publishe
This paper proposes an analysis of alternations between two or more overt markers in dif-ferential o...
[Extract] Differential object marking (DOM) has been described as a phenomenon by which a language m...
Previous analyses of case in Akha (a LoloBurmese language) vary dramatically, with proposals ranging...
Contains fulltext : 43916.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)This dissertatio...
This is the first paper to provide large-scale cross-linguistic evidence for the differential object...
Klein U, de Swart P. Case and referential properties. LINGUA. 2011;121(1):3-19.In this paper we disc...
In a broad sense, a language may be said to have Differential Subject Marking (DSM) if some subjects...
The current study examined how German speakers described a scene where an agent acts upon a patient ...
Case-systems all over the world exhibit striking similarities. In most lan- guages intransitive subj...
Many authors have argued that there exists a relation between case morphology, on the one hand, and ...
This thesis deals with direct object nouns case-marked differentially. According to the commonly ass...
This paper shows that grammatical argument marking need not be inherent to language but can result f...
Individual Papers no. 51This paper addresses a complex interaction of morphology, syntax and pragmat...
This paper explores two possible connections between the diagnostics for mor-phological and semantic...
This paper describes asymmetric differential object marking in various Uralic languages and proposes...
This paper proposes an analysis of alternations between two or more overt markers in dif-ferential o...
[Extract] Differential object marking (DOM) has been described as a phenomenon by which a language m...
Previous analyses of case in Akha (a LoloBurmese language) vary dramatically, with proposals ranging...
Contains fulltext : 43916.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)This dissertatio...
This is the first paper to provide large-scale cross-linguistic evidence for the differential object...
Klein U, de Swart P. Case and referential properties. LINGUA. 2011;121(1):3-19.In this paper we disc...
In a broad sense, a language may be said to have Differential Subject Marking (DSM) if some subjects...
The current study examined how German speakers described a scene where an agent acts upon a patient ...
Case-systems all over the world exhibit striking similarities. In most lan- guages intransitive subj...
Many authors have argued that there exists a relation between case morphology, on the one hand, and ...
This thesis deals with direct object nouns case-marked differentially. According to the commonly ass...
This paper shows that grammatical argument marking need not be inherent to language but can result f...
Individual Papers no. 51This paper addresses a complex interaction of morphology, syntax and pragmat...
This paper explores two possible connections between the diagnostics for mor-phological and semantic...
This paper describes asymmetric differential object marking in various Uralic languages and proposes...
This paper proposes an analysis of alternations between two or more overt markers in dif-ferential o...
[Extract] Differential object marking (DOM) has been described as a phenomenon by which a language m...
Previous analyses of case in Akha (a LoloBurmese language) vary dramatically, with proposals ranging...