The so-called 'raising-to-subject' pattern that verbs of the type believe can occur in is usually treated as the passive alternative for the so-called 'raising-to-object' pattern. In addition to broadening the empirical basis for the opposite claim that the English and Dutch raising-to-subject (or 'nominative and infinitive') patterns have a special functionality which is different from that of the passive construction, this paper specifically examines the stronger proposition that this has always been the case. It empirically investigates whether this proposition holds equally well for English and Dutch through a comparison of the frequencies of believe-type raising-to-object and raising-to-subject patterns in two diachronic corpora. The m...
The present paper compares the distribution of English ‑ever, German immer and/or auch, and Dutch (d...
Verbs on the Fringe: Raising Verbs as Lexical Hazards This paper explores the learning of raising ve...
While the so-called “nominative-and-infinitive” (NCI) is no longer a productive construction in Dutc...
The so-called “raising-to-subject” pattern that verbs of the type believe can occur in is usually tr...
The so-called 'raising-to-subject' pattern that verbs of the type believe can occur in is usually tr...
The so-called “raising-to-subject” pattern that verbs of the type believe can occur in is usually tr...
While the so-called “nominative-and-infinitive” (NCI) is no longer a productive construction in Dutc...
Present-day Dutch has two entrenched "grammatical" hearsay evidentials: a construction with zou (ori...
Diachronic change regarding the Germanic verb shows a tendency away from strong and towards weak inf...
Present-day Dutch has two entrenched "grammatical" hearsay evidentials: a construction with zou (ori...
The grammatical literature on Dutch generally distinguishes two “passive” alternatives to the active...
Ever since the category of evidentiality has been identified in the verbal grammar of certain langua...
Ever since the category of evidentiality has been identified in the verbal grammar of certain langua...
Periphrastic constructions with come have primarily been grammaticalized to express tense in Indo-Eu...
This paper argues for the adoption of a construction-based perspective to the investigation of diach...
The present paper compares the distribution of English ‑ever, German immer and/or auch, and Dutch (d...
Verbs on the Fringe: Raising Verbs as Lexical Hazards This paper explores the learning of raising ve...
While the so-called “nominative-and-infinitive” (NCI) is no longer a productive construction in Dutc...
The so-called “raising-to-subject” pattern that verbs of the type believe can occur in is usually tr...
The so-called 'raising-to-subject' pattern that verbs of the type believe can occur in is usually tr...
The so-called “raising-to-subject” pattern that verbs of the type believe can occur in is usually tr...
While the so-called “nominative-and-infinitive” (NCI) is no longer a productive construction in Dutc...
Present-day Dutch has two entrenched "grammatical" hearsay evidentials: a construction with zou (ori...
Diachronic change regarding the Germanic verb shows a tendency away from strong and towards weak inf...
Present-day Dutch has two entrenched "grammatical" hearsay evidentials: a construction with zou (ori...
The grammatical literature on Dutch generally distinguishes two “passive” alternatives to the active...
Ever since the category of evidentiality has been identified in the verbal grammar of certain langua...
Ever since the category of evidentiality has been identified in the verbal grammar of certain langua...
Periphrastic constructions with come have primarily been grammaticalized to express tense in Indo-Eu...
This paper argues for the adoption of a construction-based perspective to the investigation of diach...
The present paper compares the distribution of English ‑ever, German immer and/or auch, and Dutch (d...
Verbs on the Fringe: Raising Verbs as Lexical Hazards This paper explores the learning of raising ve...
While the so-called “nominative-and-infinitive” (NCI) is no longer a productive construction in Dutc...