peer reviewedPresent-day Dutch has a vestigial partitive genitive morpheme. Adjectives take the genitive -s morpheme when they are used as a dependent of a quantifier (Haeseryn et al. 1997: 863; Broekhuis 2013: 420-426). This is illustrated in (1). The construction comes in two variants: either with an overt -s suffix, or without the suffix. (1) iets bijzonder(-s) something special-GEN ‘something special’ While the two variants do not show any observable semantic difference, Pijpops Van de Velde (2014) applied mixed-model logistic regression and found that the expression of the -s is probabilistically determined by a number of factors. While overall, the [+s] variant is more frequent, the [-s] variant is also fairly common, and is more lik...
peer reviewedIn a traditional view of language processing, language users fully analyze a sentence t...
We advance theory formation in cognitive sociolinguistics by exploring the extent to which language ...
peer reviewedIn an inconspicuous corner of Dutch grammar, one may find adjectives receiving -s infle...
Present-day Dutch has a vestigial partitive genitive morpheme. Adjectives take the genitive -s morph...
Deflection has been rampaging in the history of Dutch, but in this long-term process, the genitive p...
Lectal contamination is the language-external counterpart of what has been described as construction...
Constructions that are structurally unrelated, occasionally give rise to strings that are superficia...
peer reviewedIn every-day language use, two or more structurally unrelated constructions may occasio...
peer reviewedThis paper presents evidence from both corpora and agent-based simulation for the effec...
The construction, as a successor to the Saussurian sign, is usually envisaged as a discrete form-mea...
In Dutch, high-frequency words with the suffix -lijk are often highly reduced in spontaneous unscrip...
As a corpus-based inquiry into the probabilistic nature of lectal variation, the present study seeks...
This study applies the methodology described by Gries & Deshors (2014) within the framework of the C...
Constructions are often defined as form-function pairings. The underlying assumption is that the for...
In this article, we introduce the effect of “constructional contamination”. In constructional contam...
peer reviewedIn a traditional view of language processing, language users fully analyze a sentence t...
We advance theory formation in cognitive sociolinguistics by exploring the extent to which language ...
peer reviewedIn an inconspicuous corner of Dutch grammar, one may find adjectives receiving -s infle...
Present-day Dutch has a vestigial partitive genitive morpheme. Adjectives take the genitive -s morph...
Deflection has been rampaging in the history of Dutch, but in this long-term process, the genitive p...
Lectal contamination is the language-external counterpart of what has been described as construction...
Constructions that are structurally unrelated, occasionally give rise to strings that are superficia...
peer reviewedIn every-day language use, two or more structurally unrelated constructions may occasio...
peer reviewedThis paper presents evidence from both corpora and agent-based simulation for the effec...
The construction, as a successor to the Saussurian sign, is usually envisaged as a discrete form-mea...
In Dutch, high-frequency words with the suffix -lijk are often highly reduced in spontaneous unscrip...
As a corpus-based inquiry into the probabilistic nature of lectal variation, the present study seeks...
This study applies the methodology described by Gries & Deshors (2014) within the framework of the C...
Constructions are often defined as form-function pairings. The underlying assumption is that the for...
In this article, we introduce the effect of “constructional contamination”. In constructional contam...
peer reviewedIn a traditional view of language processing, language users fully analyze a sentence t...
We advance theory formation in cognitive sociolinguistics by exploring the extent to which language ...
peer reviewedIn an inconspicuous corner of Dutch grammar, one may find adjectives receiving -s infle...