In progressive Case attraction, the Case of a head nominal overwrites the Case of a following coindexed relative pronoun. The reverse process is called ‘inverse’ Case attraction. There, the morphologically overt Case of a relative pronoun overwrites the Case of a preceding head nominal. Inverse Case attraction has been attested in languages like Ancient Greek, Latin, and in the history of different Germanic languages. For modern standard German, its existence has in general been denied. We first discuss current analyses which have nevertheless identified inverse Case attraction in modern German on the basis of historical data and experimental judgement studies. We then present four behavioral experiments on the processing of German sentence...
This paper reports the results of a corpus investigation on case conflicts in German argument free r...
In this article five existing explanations for the loss of case morphology in the Germanic languages...
It is well-known that in languages with overt morphological case, marked, or inherent, case behaves ...
In progressive Case attraction, the Case of a head nominal overwrites the Case of a following coinde...
The paper argues that structural case assignment properties of English and German reduced comparativ...
The current study examined how German speakers described a scene where an agent acts upon a patient ...
This article discusses relative clauses in different varieties of German, paying special attention t...
The article talk examines the distribution of relativising strategies in English in a cross-Germanic...
This article represents the first attempt to formulate a hypothetical sequence for German case acqui...
This is the first book on the acquisition of the German case system by foreign language learners. It...
We present two ERP experiments examining the resolution of language processing conflicts involving t...
Pronoun-case-only (pro-case) languages in Germanic have been under-investigated, despite exhibiting ...
There are few linguistic phenomena that have seduced linguists so skillfully as grammatical case has...
The article examines the second language acquisition of case in German prepositional phrases (PPs), ...
The authors investigate how morphological relationships between inflected word forms are represented...
This paper reports the results of a corpus investigation on case conflicts in German argument free r...
In this article five existing explanations for the loss of case morphology in the Germanic languages...
It is well-known that in languages with overt morphological case, marked, or inherent, case behaves ...
In progressive Case attraction, the Case of a head nominal overwrites the Case of a following coinde...
The paper argues that structural case assignment properties of English and German reduced comparativ...
The current study examined how German speakers described a scene where an agent acts upon a patient ...
This article discusses relative clauses in different varieties of German, paying special attention t...
The article talk examines the distribution of relativising strategies in English in a cross-Germanic...
This article represents the first attempt to formulate a hypothetical sequence for German case acqui...
This is the first book on the acquisition of the German case system by foreign language learners. It...
We present two ERP experiments examining the resolution of language processing conflicts involving t...
Pronoun-case-only (pro-case) languages in Germanic have been under-investigated, despite exhibiting ...
There are few linguistic phenomena that have seduced linguists so skillfully as grammatical case has...
The article examines the second language acquisition of case in German prepositional phrases (PPs), ...
The authors investigate how morphological relationships between inflected word forms are represented...
This paper reports the results of a corpus investigation on case conflicts in German argument free r...
In this article five existing explanations for the loss of case morphology in the Germanic languages...
It is well-known that in languages with overt morphological case, marked, or inherent, case behaves ...