In this project I attempt to shed light on an array of interacting syntactic phenomena relating to the so-called morphological passive in Swedish. Its morpheme, -s, has been assumed to be a voice morpheme, but in reality it has many of the interpretational characteristics of a verb argument. I argue that a remnant movement analysis of Swedish verb movement can accommodate for this morpheme’s distribution and interpretations as a verb argument. This analysis offers an interesting perspective on the nature of Object Shift in Scandinavian, which there has been practically no consensus on. I will suggest that the distribution of Object Shift and -s are a part of a syntactic process that apparently...
In this article, I give a status report and present data from an ongo-ing investigation of the under...
In this article I argue that weak pronouns in the Scandinvian languages should be analysed as functi...
In this thesis, the syntactic and morphological characteristics of modal verbs in Swedish have been ...
In this project I attempt to shed light on an array of interacting syntactic phenomena relatin...
The thesis discusses Object Shift, weak pronoun shift in the Scandinavian languages, from the intona...
The term ‘Object Shift’ means that a weak object pronoun has been raised to a position to the left o...
Object shift (OS) is a word order phenomenon in Scandinavian languages where under some circumstance...
This article presents a corpus-based investigation of the motivations behind the use of the s-passiv...
This paper presents two novel findings: I show (i) that there is a strong connection between ϕ-featu...
In this study I approach the question of passive choice in Swedish from a lexical perspective. Swedi...
This volume explores morphosyntactic change in the Late Modern Swedish period from the 18th century ...
We argue that there exist two kinds of passive structures, a) one generated in the base b) the other...
The topic of my article is Object Shift and optionality, mainly from a Swedish viewpoint. I present ...
Övdalian is spoken in central Sweden by about 2000 speakers. Traditionally categorized as a dialect ...
Övdalian is spoken in central Sweden by about 2000 speakers. Traditionally categorized as a dialect ...
In this article, I give a status report and present data from an ongo-ing investigation of the under...
In this article I argue that weak pronouns in the Scandinvian languages should be analysed as functi...
In this thesis, the syntactic and morphological characteristics of modal verbs in Swedish have been ...
In this project I attempt to shed light on an array of interacting syntactic phenomena relatin...
The thesis discusses Object Shift, weak pronoun shift in the Scandinavian languages, from the intona...
The term ‘Object Shift’ means that a weak object pronoun has been raised to a position to the left o...
Object shift (OS) is a word order phenomenon in Scandinavian languages where under some circumstance...
This article presents a corpus-based investigation of the motivations behind the use of the s-passiv...
This paper presents two novel findings: I show (i) that there is a strong connection between ϕ-featu...
In this study I approach the question of passive choice in Swedish from a lexical perspective. Swedi...
This volume explores morphosyntactic change in the Late Modern Swedish period from the 18th century ...
We argue that there exist two kinds of passive structures, a) one generated in the base b) the other...
The topic of my article is Object Shift and optionality, mainly from a Swedish viewpoint. I present ...
Övdalian is spoken in central Sweden by about 2000 speakers. Traditionally categorized as a dialect ...
Övdalian is spoken in central Sweden by about 2000 speakers. Traditionally categorized as a dialect ...
In this article, I give a status report and present data from an ongo-ing investigation of the under...
In this article I argue that weak pronouns in the Scandinvian languages should be analysed as functi...
In this thesis, the syntactic and morphological characteristics of modal verbs in Swedish have been ...