This paper investigates aspects of the noun phrase from a Scandinavian heritage language perspective, with an emphasis on noun phrase-internal gender agreement and noun declension. Our results are somewhat surprising compared with earlier research: We find that noun phrase-internal agreement for the most part is rather stable. To the extent that we find attrition, it affects agreement in the noun phrase, but not the declension of the noun. We discuss whether this means that gender is lost and has been reduced to a pure declension class, or whether gender is retained. We argue that gender is actually retained in these heritage speakers. One argument for this is that the speakers who lack agreement in complex noun phrases, have agreement inta...
In this study, we present an analysis of gender assignment tendencies in Jamtlandic, a language vari...
The purpose of this article is to outline the basic properties of the gender system in Swedish. I ar...
[Extract] 1. Gender and noun class in one language?\ud \ud Almost all languages have some grammatica...
Previous studies on gender in Scandinavian heritage languages in America have looked at noun-phrase ...
This paper investigates possible attrition/change in the gender system of Norwegian heritage languag...
This study addresses gender assignment in six North Scandinavian varieties with a three-gender syste...
This paper discusses grammatical gender in Norwegian by bringing together data from first language a...
There has been a diachronic tendency to align gender and declension in West Nordic (Bjorvand 1972; E...
This article investigates language variation and change in the grammatical gender system of Norwegia...
In this paper, we investigate an ongoing change in the grammatical gender system of Norwegian. Previ...
This paper investigates the gender system of 25 American Norwegian speakers by focusing on the indef...
This master's thesis is a study on the gender system of the Swedish dialect spoken in Jämtland, a pr...
In some Norwegian dialects, such as older Oslo dialect, the noun mamma ‘mother’ unexpectedly appears...
In the Germanic languages, gender and declension are two classification systems with a restricted f...
In most studies on gender processing, native speakers of the same language are treated as a homogene...
In this study, we present an analysis of gender assignment tendencies in Jamtlandic, a language vari...
The purpose of this article is to outline the basic properties of the gender system in Swedish. I ar...
[Extract] 1. Gender and noun class in one language?\ud \ud Almost all languages have some grammatica...
Previous studies on gender in Scandinavian heritage languages in America have looked at noun-phrase ...
This paper investigates possible attrition/change in the gender system of Norwegian heritage languag...
This study addresses gender assignment in six North Scandinavian varieties with a three-gender syste...
This paper discusses grammatical gender in Norwegian by bringing together data from first language a...
There has been a diachronic tendency to align gender and declension in West Nordic (Bjorvand 1972; E...
This article investigates language variation and change in the grammatical gender system of Norwegia...
In this paper, we investigate an ongoing change in the grammatical gender system of Norwegian. Previ...
This paper investigates the gender system of 25 American Norwegian speakers by focusing on the indef...
This master's thesis is a study on the gender system of the Swedish dialect spoken in Jämtland, a pr...
In some Norwegian dialects, such as older Oslo dialect, the noun mamma ‘mother’ unexpectedly appears...
In the Germanic languages, gender and declension are two classification systems with a restricted f...
In most studies on gender processing, native speakers of the same language are treated as a homogene...
In this study, we present an analysis of gender assignment tendencies in Jamtlandic, a language vari...
The purpose of this article is to outline the basic properties of the gender system in Swedish. I ar...
[Extract] 1. Gender and noun class in one language?\ud \ud Almost all languages have some grammatica...