This paper discusses grammatical gender in Norwegian by bringing together data from first language acquisition, Norwegian heritage language, and dialect change. In all these contexts, gender is often claimed to be a vulnerable category, arguably due to the relative non-transparency of gender assignment. Furthermore, the feminine gender is in the process of being lost in many Norwegian dialects, as feminine agreement forms (for example, the indefinite article) are merged with the masculine. The definite suffix, in contrast, is quite stable, as it is acquired early and does not undergo attrition/change. We argue that the combined data provide evidence that gender and declension class are separate phenomena, and we outline a possible formal an...
The paper examines the phenomenon of the feminine gender, which in Bokmål is optional. The choice be...
Dano-Norwegian, the Sami language and Finnish express animacy differently in their grammatical gende...
Grammatical gender is known to be prone to language variation and change. The papers in this special...
This paper investigates possible attrition/change in the gender system of Norwegian heritage languag...
In this paper, we investigate an ongoing change in the grammatical gender system of Norwegian. Previ...
It is well known that grammatical gender systems may change historically. Previous research has docu...
This article investigates language variation and change in the grammatical gender system of Norwegia...
In most studies on gender processing, native speakers of the same language are treated as a homogene...
This study addresses gender assignment in six North Scandinavian varieties with a three-gender syste...
This paper investigates aspects of the noun phrase from a Scandinavian heritage language perspective...
Heritage grammars have been argued to differ with respect to whether they are an instantiation of di...
In this dissertation, I investigate the nature of generalizations in grammatical gender and inflecti...
This paper investigates the gender system of 25 American Norwegian speakers by focusing on the indef...
In some Norwegian dialects, such as older Oslo dialect, the noun mamma ‘mother’ unexpectedly appears...
Previous studies on gender in Scandinavian heritage languages in America have looked at noun-phrase ...
The paper examines the phenomenon of the feminine gender, which in Bokmål is optional. The choice be...
Dano-Norwegian, the Sami language and Finnish express animacy differently in their grammatical gende...
Grammatical gender is known to be prone to language variation and change. The papers in this special...
This paper investigates possible attrition/change in the gender system of Norwegian heritage languag...
In this paper, we investigate an ongoing change in the grammatical gender system of Norwegian. Previ...
It is well known that grammatical gender systems may change historically. Previous research has docu...
This article investigates language variation and change in the grammatical gender system of Norwegia...
In most studies on gender processing, native speakers of the same language are treated as a homogene...
This study addresses gender assignment in six North Scandinavian varieties with a three-gender syste...
This paper investigates aspects of the noun phrase from a Scandinavian heritage language perspective...
Heritage grammars have been argued to differ with respect to whether they are an instantiation of di...
In this dissertation, I investigate the nature of generalizations in grammatical gender and inflecti...
This paper investigates the gender system of 25 American Norwegian speakers by focusing on the indef...
In some Norwegian dialects, such as older Oslo dialect, the noun mamma ‘mother’ unexpectedly appears...
Previous studies on gender in Scandinavian heritage languages in America have looked at noun-phrase ...
The paper examines the phenomenon of the feminine gender, which in Bokmål is optional. The choice be...
Dano-Norwegian, the Sami language and Finnish express animacy differently in their grammatical gende...
Grammatical gender is known to be prone to language variation and change. The papers in this special...