The article deals with the extension of definite markers into the domain of indefinite NPs in Scandinavian and Baltic. Definite articles evolving further down the grammaticalization path typically become markers of specificity (Greenberg 1978, Himmelmann 1998), but the development of definite markers in Baltic and Scandinavian languages (formally divergent as Baltic uses definite adjectives as the principal grammatical means of marking definiteness whereas Scandinavian employs definite articles for this purpose) has taken a different direction. After a brief discussion of the different types of extension of definite markers beyond their core domain in Baltic and Scandinavian, we focus on a s...
This paper deals with the development of three different definiteness markers in Old Scandinavian: t...
This paper deals with the development of three different definiteness markers in Old Scandinavian: t...
The aim of this dissertation is to investigate the structure of the DP and its reflex in Scandinavia...
The article deals with the extension of definite markers into the domain of indefinite NPs in Scandi...
The paper deals with semantic developments in the Lithuanian and Latvian definite adjectival forms. ...
[full article and abstract in English] This paper offers a description of the linear structure of th...
[full article and abstract in English] This paper offers a description of the linear structure of...
ABSTRACT. Adjectives in definite Scandinavian DPs trigger an additional lexical determiner (double d...
The dissertation investigates definiteness marking in two typologically diverse languages — Lithuani...
The dissertation investigates definiteness marking in two typologically diverse languages — Lithuani...
This book is an account of the rise of definite and indefinite articles in Danish, Swedish and Icela...
In Swedish determiner phrases definiteness can be realised both pre-nominally with a definite articl...
While Lithuanian (a Baltic language) lacks definite articles, it can use an adjectival system to enc...
Modern Swedish uses both a free, pre-adjectival, definite article and a definite suffix on the noun ...
The object of the thesis is compensation of definite articles in Lithuanian based on translations fr...
This paper deals with the development of three different definiteness markers in Old Scandinavian: t...
This paper deals with the development of three different definiteness markers in Old Scandinavian: t...
The aim of this dissertation is to investigate the structure of the DP and its reflex in Scandinavia...
The article deals with the extension of definite markers into the domain of indefinite NPs in Scandi...
The paper deals with semantic developments in the Lithuanian and Latvian definite adjectival forms. ...
[full article and abstract in English] This paper offers a description of the linear structure of th...
[full article and abstract in English] This paper offers a description of the linear structure of...
ABSTRACT. Adjectives in definite Scandinavian DPs trigger an additional lexical determiner (double d...
The dissertation investigates definiteness marking in two typologically diverse languages — Lithuani...
The dissertation investigates definiteness marking in two typologically diverse languages — Lithuani...
This book is an account of the rise of definite and indefinite articles in Danish, Swedish and Icela...
In Swedish determiner phrases definiteness can be realised both pre-nominally with a definite articl...
While Lithuanian (a Baltic language) lacks definite articles, it can use an adjectival system to enc...
Modern Swedish uses both a free, pre-adjectival, definite article and a definite suffix on the noun ...
The object of the thesis is compensation of definite articles in Lithuanian based on translations fr...
This paper deals with the development of three different definiteness markers in Old Scandinavian: t...
This paper deals with the development of three different definiteness markers in Old Scandinavian: t...
The aim of this dissertation is to investigate the structure of the DP and its reflex in Scandinavia...