Abstract The loss of inflectional categories is often thought of as a type of simplification. In this paper we present a survey of phenomena involving the reduction of adjective agreement in Scandinavian, using examples from Norwegian, and discuss their diachronic origins, including a new account of the development of indeclinability in adjectives such as kry ‘proud’. These examples each involve lexically restricted non-canonical inflection – syncretism, defectiveness, overdifferentiation and periphrasis – in particular paradigm cells or syntactic environments. They show that the loss of inflection does not necessarily simplify grammar, and in some cases, can increase grammatical complexity by adding lexical exceptions to general rules. Thi...
A number of European languages have undergone a change from object-verb to verb-object order. We fo...
The Danish case system changed profoundly throughout the Middle Danish era. Based on examples from m...
Inflectional classes are classes of lexemes which share a content paradigm (they inflect for the sam...
AbstractWork in sociolinguistic typology and creole studies has established the theory that intensiv...
The aim of this paper is to show that the interaction between adjectival inflection and the realizat...
This article addresses a highly instructive example of inflectional class change: the emergence of a...
This paper deals with inflectional change in Germanic standard and non-standard varieties, challengi...
This book looks at some phenomena within the grammar of the noun phrase in a group of traditional No...
This study examines two examples of grammatical variation in Norwegian inflection, strong versus wea...
In this paper, we demonstrate that adjective endings in the Germanic languages do not pattern unifor...
This paper examines the typological characteristics of causal–noncausal verb alternations in Norwegi...
Simplification processes resulting from second language acquisition in language contact scenarios se...
This article investigates the diachronic development of language mixing within noun phrases in the h...
ABSTRACT. Adjectives in definite Scandinavian DPs trigger an additional lexical determiner (double d...
This study considers a contrast in Mainland Scandinavian with respect to co-occurrence of a suffixal...
A number of European languages have undergone a change from object-verb to verb-object order. We fo...
The Danish case system changed profoundly throughout the Middle Danish era. Based on examples from m...
Inflectional classes are classes of lexemes which share a content paradigm (they inflect for the sam...
AbstractWork in sociolinguistic typology and creole studies has established the theory that intensiv...
The aim of this paper is to show that the interaction between adjectival inflection and the realizat...
This article addresses a highly instructive example of inflectional class change: the emergence of a...
This paper deals with inflectional change in Germanic standard and non-standard varieties, challengi...
This book looks at some phenomena within the grammar of the noun phrase in a group of traditional No...
This study examines two examples of grammatical variation in Norwegian inflection, strong versus wea...
In this paper, we demonstrate that adjective endings in the Germanic languages do not pattern unifor...
This paper examines the typological characteristics of causal–noncausal verb alternations in Norwegi...
Simplification processes resulting from second language acquisition in language contact scenarios se...
This article investigates the diachronic development of language mixing within noun phrases in the h...
ABSTRACT. Adjectives in definite Scandinavian DPs trigger an additional lexical determiner (double d...
This study considers a contrast in Mainland Scandinavian with respect to co-occurrence of a suffixal...
A number of European languages have undergone a change from object-verb to verb-object order. We fo...
The Danish case system changed profoundly throughout the Middle Danish era. Based on examples from m...
Inflectional classes are classes of lexemes which share a content paradigm (they inflect for the sam...