In many Oceanic languages the "indirect" possessive construction, which is typically associated with alienable possession, uses special forms to host person and number agreement indexing the possessor. This can be contrasted with the "direct" possessive construction, typically associated with inalienable possession, where a lexical possessum noun itself carries possessor-indexing agreement. The host forms used in the indirect construction are often referred to as "classifiers". We argue that this term should not be applied to indirect possession marking in many Oceanic languages, and present evidence to show that indirect possessor-indexing hosts should be treated as the syntactic head of the noun phrase in which they occur, thereby allowin...
Alienable possessive constructions in Biakic stand out with respect to the South Halmahera-West New ...
Referential kinship terms in Matukar Panau (Oceanic, Papua New Guinea) are obligatorily possessed. T...
The relevance of a possessor to the information expressed in an utterance has been recognized as a f...
In many Oceanic languages the "indirect" possessive construction, which is typically associated with...
In many Oceanic languages the "indirect" possessive construction, which is typically associated with...
In many Oceanic languages the ‘indirect ’ possessive construction, which is typically associated wit...
Possession in some Austronesian languages shows levels of elaboration far in excess of cross-linguis...
Indirect possessive hosts (IPHs) in Oceanic languages are normally described as relational classifie...
Many non-Polynesian Oceanic languages are known to have two morphological strategies to express attr...
Most Northwest Solomonic (NWS) languages employ possessor-indexing or former possessor-indexing morp...
In Gurindji (Ngumpin-Yapa; Australia) bound forms that index the morphosyntactic features of predica...
This study focuses on the grammaticalization of agreement markers from possessive pronouns, which ha...
Some languages around the Pacific have multiple possessive classes of alienable constructions using ...
This paper focuses on contact interaction in the development of possessive constructions. In contra...
It is generally assumed that properties of the phrasal head determine the properties of a syntactic ...
Alienable possessive constructions in Biakic stand out with respect to the South Halmahera-West New ...
Referential kinship terms in Matukar Panau (Oceanic, Papua New Guinea) are obligatorily possessed. T...
The relevance of a possessor to the information expressed in an utterance has been recognized as a f...
In many Oceanic languages the "indirect" possessive construction, which is typically associated with...
In many Oceanic languages the "indirect" possessive construction, which is typically associated with...
In many Oceanic languages the ‘indirect ’ possessive construction, which is typically associated wit...
Possession in some Austronesian languages shows levels of elaboration far in excess of cross-linguis...
Indirect possessive hosts (IPHs) in Oceanic languages are normally described as relational classifie...
Many non-Polynesian Oceanic languages are known to have two morphological strategies to express attr...
Most Northwest Solomonic (NWS) languages employ possessor-indexing or former possessor-indexing morp...
In Gurindji (Ngumpin-Yapa; Australia) bound forms that index the morphosyntactic features of predica...
This study focuses on the grammaticalization of agreement markers from possessive pronouns, which ha...
Some languages around the Pacific have multiple possessive classes of alienable constructions using ...
This paper focuses on contact interaction in the development of possessive constructions. In contra...
It is generally assumed that properties of the phrasal head determine the properties of a syntactic ...
Alienable possessive constructions in Biakic stand out with respect to the South Halmahera-West New ...
Referential kinship terms in Matukar Panau (Oceanic, Papua New Guinea) are obligatorily possessed. T...
The relevance of a possessor to the information expressed in an utterance has been recognized as a f...