This article is concerned with some fine-grained distinctions in the syntax of subjects in Old Irish. Old Irish (7th–9th century) is typically described as a VSO language, but there are a number of sentences in the corpus in which the subject is not immediately after the verb. In this paper two case studies are conducted the results of which show that (a) non-final late subjects are confined to non-transitive and ‘atypical transitive’ clauses having the general form VXSY, and (b) the position of final late subjects in the schema VXS# can understood in descriptive terms as ‘right-dislocated’ and motivated largely in information structure terms (i.e. Topic-Comment, Focus-...
This brief paper examines three constructions attested in the Old Irish glosses. The relationship be...
A subject analysis of oblique subject-like arguments remains controversial even across the modern la...
Irish is a VSO language as shown in (1).(1) Chonaic Máire an catsee Mary the cat"Mary saw the cat."C...
This article is concerned with some fine-grained distinctions in the syntax of subjects ...
This article is concerned with some fine-grained distinctions in the syntax of subjects ...
A subject analysis of oblique subject-like arguments remains controversial even across the modern la...
A subject analysis of oblique subject-like arguments remains controversial even across modern langua...
A subject analysis of oblique subject-like arguments remains controversial even across modern langua...
This paper examines subject-verb agreement in Early-Irish sentences with coordinate subjects. We cl...
This paper examines subject-verb agreement in Early-Irish sentences with coordinate subjects. We cl...
This paper compares argument marking of finite and non-finite forms (verbal nouns) of 26 Old Irish v...
This paper compares argument marking of finite and non-finite forms (verbal nouns) of 26 Old Irish v...
Presents negative results arising from attempts to explain how ambiguous relative clauses in Modern ...
This article examines Middle and Early Modern Irish sentences like /in mairenn hé/? ‘does he live?’ ...
This brief paper examines three constructions attested in the Old Irish glosses. The relationship be...
This brief paper examines three constructions attested in the Old Irish glosses. The relationship be...
A subject analysis of oblique subject-like arguments remains controversial even across the modern la...
Irish is a VSO language as shown in (1).(1) Chonaic Máire an catsee Mary the cat"Mary saw the cat."C...
This article is concerned with some fine-grained distinctions in the syntax of subjects ...
This article is concerned with some fine-grained distinctions in the syntax of subjects ...
A subject analysis of oblique subject-like arguments remains controversial even across the modern la...
A subject analysis of oblique subject-like arguments remains controversial even across modern langua...
A subject analysis of oblique subject-like arguments remains controversial even across modern langua...
This paper examines subject-verb agreement in Early-Irish sentences with coordinate subjects. We cl...
This paper examines subject-verb agreement in Early-Irish sentences with coordinate subjects. We cl...
This paper compares argument marking of finite and non-finite forms (verbal nouns) of 26 Old Irish v...
This paper compares argument marking of finite and non-finite forms (verbal nouns) of 26 Old Irish v...
Presents negative results arising from attempts to explain how ambiguous relative clauses in Modern ...
This article examines Middle and Early Modern Irish sentences like /in mairenn hé/? ‘does he live?’ ...
This brief paper examines three constructions attested in the Old Irish glosses. The relationship be...
This brief paper examines three constructions attested in the Old Irish glosses. The relationship be...
A subject analysis of oblique subject-like arguments remains controversial even across the modern la...
Irish is a VSO language as shown in (1).(1) Chonaic Máire an catsee Mary the cat"Mary saw the cat."C...