This study investigates the role of analogy in the changes in inflectional classes of Swedish verbs from the Old Swedish to Modern Swedish period. Verbs in the Germanic languages are generally classed as either weak or strong according to their type of inflection, but closer examination reveals interesting subtleties and exceptions to this general picture. Furthermore, changes in inflectional class go in different directions: not only from strong to weak, but also the other way around, and between strong classes and weak classes. Two analogical computer models — Analogical Modeling (Skousen 1989) and Minimal Generalization (Albright & Hayes 2002) — are used to model a selection of 80 such changes in the history of Swedish verbs. Taking ...
An attempt is made to account for the development of the Swedish perfect tense. The analysis is bas...
An attempt is made to account for the development of the Swedish perfect tense. The analysis is bas...
This thesis focuses on strong verbs in Old English compared to strong verbs in Old Norse...
This study investigates the role of analogy in the changes in inflectional classes of Swedish verbs ...
This study investigates the role of analogy in the changes in inflectional classes of Swedish verbs ...
This study investigates the role of analogy in the changes in inflectional classes of Swedish verbs ...
Why did Shakespeare write 'shak’d' when we say 'shook'? Why do some people say 'dived' and others 'd...
Why did Shakespeare write 'shak’d' when we say 'shook'? Why do some people say 'dived' and others 'd...
Why did Shakespeare write 'shak’d' when we say 'shook'? Why do some people say 'dived' and others 'd...
Why did Shakespeare write 'shak’d' when we say 'shook'? Why do some people say 'dived' and others 'd...
Why did Shakespeare write 'shak’d' when we say 'shook'? Why do some people say 'dived' and others 'd...
The Germanic past tense system is reliant upon two general morphological strategies. The first strat...
In this study, we examine how Finnish upper secondary students learning Swedish as a second language...
The Germanic languages employ two general strategies of past tense formation. The first strategy is ...
The Germanic languages maintain two general strategies to form the finite past tense of a verb. The ...
An attempt is made to account for the development of the Swedish perfect tense. The analysis is bas...
An attempt is made to account for the development of the Swedish perfect tense. The analysis is bas...
This thesis focuses on strong verbs in Old English compared to strong verbs in Old Norse...
This study investigates the role of analogy in the changes in inflectional classes of Swedish verbs ...
This study investigates the role of analogy in the changes in inflectional classes of Swedish verbs ...
This study investigates the role of analogy in the changes in inflectional classes of Swedish verbs ...
Why did Shakespeare write 'shak’d' when we say 'shook'? Why do some people say 'dived' and others 'd...
Why did Shakespeare write 'shak’d' when we say 'shook'? Why do some people say 'dived' and others 'd...
Why did Shakespeare write 'shak’d' when we say 'shook'? Why do some people say 'dived' and others 'd...
Why did Shakespeare write 'shak’d' when we say 'shook'? Why do some people say 'dived' and others 'd...
Why did Shakespeare write 'shak’d' when we say 'shook'? Why do some people say 'dived' and others 'd...
The Germanic past tense system is reliant upon two general morphological strategies. The first strat...
In this study, we examine how Finnish upper secondary students learning Swedish as a second language...
The Germanic languages employ two general strategies of past tense formation. The first strategy is ...
The Germanic languages maintain two general strategies to form the finite past tense of a verb. The ...
An attempt is made to account for the development of the Swedish perfect tense. The analysis is bas...
An attempt is made to account for the development of the Swedish perfect tense. The analysis is bas...
This thesis focuses on strong verbs in Old English compared to strong verbs in Old Norse...