Across languages, clauses expressing possession, location, and existencc exhibit many similarities. To capture their evident affinity, it is often claimed that possessives derive -synclironically or diaclironically- from expressions of location/existence. This localist account obscures a basic contrast between two broad classes of possessive constructions, those based on HAVE-type predicates and those based on BE-type predicates. These predicates grammaticize from lexical verbs pertaining to different aspects of embodied experience, resulting in subtle semantic differences reflected in contrasting grammatical constructions for clausal possession. Moreover, both HAVE- and BE-type possessives show interesting cross-linguistic variation which ...
International audienceRecent accounts on the typology of predicative possession, including those by ...
This article argues that Japanese locational sentences (with aru or iru), where possessor and locati...
The article examines the semantic and syntactic characteristics of existential (es gibt / there is) ...
Across languages, clauses expressing possession, location, and existencc exhibit many similarities. ...
Proposal This paper argues that crosslinguistic variation in the forms of clausal possessive predica...
This work evaluates the oft-made claim that possessors are (animate) locations. I argue this possess...
[Extract] In some languages, existential, locative and possessive predications are handled by verbs...
[Extract] Every language has a mechanism for expressing posession, within a noun phrase and with a c...
Building on decompositional analyses of prepositions and possessive verbs (Harley 2002, Svenonius 2...
This paper is a classic typological study of existential clauses, predlocative clauses, and predposs...
This topic became central to typological linguistics in the second half of the 1990s. Since then qui...
This paper surveys data on possessive constructions in a number of languages that have been involved...
The paper focuses on distribution and correlation of semantic features distinguished within scope of...
It is widely appreciated that the linguistic category of possession does not reduce to any single, f...
Nivaĉle (Mataguayan) and Pilagá (Guaykuruan) languages, which geographically overlap in the Argent...
International audienceRecent accounts on the typology of predicative possession, including those by ...
This article argues that Japanese locational sentences (with aru or iru), where possessor and locati...
The article examines the semantic and syntactic characteristics of existential (es gibt / there is) ...
Across languages, clauses expressing possession, location, and existencc exhibit many similarities. ...
Proposal This paper argues that crosslinguistic variation in the forms of clausal possessive predica...
This work evaluates the oft-made claim that possessors are (animate) locations. I argue this possess...
[Extract] In some languages, existential, locative and possessive predications are handled by verbs...
[Extract] Every language has a mechanism for expressing posession, within a noun phrase and with a c...
Building on decompositional analyses of prepositions and possessive verbs (Harley 2002, Svenonius 2...
This paper is a classic typological study of existential clauses, predlocative clauses, and predposs...
This topic became central to typological linguistics in the second half of the 1990s. Since then qui...
This paper surveys data on possessive constructions in a number of languages that have been involved...
The paper focuses on distribution and correlation of semantic features distinguished within scope of...
It is widely appreciated that the linguistic category of possession does not reduce to any single, f...
Nivaĉle (Mataguayan) and Pilagá (Guaykuruan) languages, which geographically overlap in the Argent...
International audienceRecent accounts on the typology of predicative possession, including those by ...
This article argues that Japanese locational sentences (with aru or iru), where possessor and locati...
The article examines the semantic and syntactic characteristics of existential (es gibt / there is) ...