This paper presents three case studies using a relational database to investigate the phonology and morphology of Old High German (OHG) nominal forms quantitatively. Results first show that the -iz-/-az-stem class was less clearly defined than handbooks suggest, and that -ir was not yet a general plural marker. Second, for feminine i-stem nouns, the frequency of primary umlaut does not increase over the OHG period, nor does its association with plurality. Third, the study charts the transition of dative plural marking from -um to -Vn during the OHG period
344 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1979.U of I OnlyRestricted to the ...
The role of semantics in inflectional morphology has long been debated (Huang & Pinker, 2010; Pi...
This paper presents an example of a historical study based on comparable corpora. It aims to analyse...
This paper presents three case studies using a relational database to investigate the phonology and ...
This dissertation focuses on the Old High German (OHG) 1st person plural ending-mēs, its origin, his...
This dissertation focuses on the Old High German (OHG) 1st person plural ending -mes, its origin, hi...
This article reconstructs the archaic Germanic rhotic by examining a natural class pattern common to...
This dissertation is a quantitative, exploratory study of morphological variation and change in Earl...
Nominalized infinitives (NIs, such as (das) Lachen ‘(the) laughing’, (das) Um-die-Ecke-Wohnen lit. ʻ...
This paper deals with inflectional change in Germanic standard and non-standard varieties, challengi...
This dissertation analyses the accuracy of the orthographic descriptions found in traditional Early ...
The ‘Word Families in Diachrony’ project (WoDia), for which a funding application to the DFG is in p...
In the present article, I analyse the spelling of i‒mutated vowels in Old High German and Old Englis...
This article deals with structure and change of the nominal case systems of two isolated Germanic va...
This study describes the 1200-year history of German quantifying expressions like nîoman anderro \u3...
344 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1979.U of I OnlyRestricted to the ...
The role of semantics in inflectional morphology has long been debated (Huang & Pinker, 2010; Pi...
This paper presents an example of a historical study based on comparable corpora. It aims to analyse...
This paper presents three case studies using a relational database to investigate the phonology and ...
This dissertation focuses on the Old High German (OHG) 1st person plural ending-mēs, its origin, his...
This dissertation focuses on the Old High German (OHG) 1st person plural ending -mes, its origin, hi...
This article reconstructs the archaic Germanic rhotic by examining a natural class pattern common to...
This dissertation is a quantitative, exploratory study of morphological variation and change in Earl...
Nominalized infinitives (NIs, such as (das) Lachen ‘(the) laughing’, (das) Um-die-Ecke-Wohnen lit. ʻ...
This paper deals with inflectional change in Germanic standard and non-standard varieties, challengi...
This dissertation analyses the accuracy of the orthographic descriptions found in traditional Early ...
The ‘Word Families in Diachrony’ project (WoDia), for which a funding application to the DFG is in p...
In the present article, I analyse the spelling of i‒mutated vowels in Old High German and Old Englis...
This article deals with structure and change of the nominal case systems of two isolated Germanic va...
This study describes the 1200-year history of German quantifying expressions like nîoman anderro \u3...
344 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1979.U of I OnlyRestricted to the ...
The role of semantics in inflectional morphology has long been debated (Huang & Pinker, 2010; Pi...
This paper presents an example of a historical study based on comparable corpora. It aims to analyse...