Previous approaches to the passive development from a reflexive marking focus on how the former is similar to the latter semantically and syntactically. I show that the passive evolution is better understood by looking at the internal procedures that the reflexive undergoes on the way to the passive. This approach clearly recognizes that reflexive clauses with agent subjects are highly resistant to the passive interpretation, for example. A reflexive marking tends to acquire a canonical passive function when it loses the true reflexive use, and morphologically, when it becomes an affix
Starting from the basic observation that, across languages, the anticausative variant of an alternat...
This article discusses the continuity of passive and spontaneous, focusing on non marked actor in pa...
Tyvan reflexive voice has a seemingly wide range of use. This paper divides the Tyvan reflexive into...
Previous approaches to the passive development from a reflexive marking focus on how the former is s...
Anna Siewierska and Dik Bakker seek to establish whether passives with agents are more canonical tha...
Why do so many languages employ special means to express reflexive predicates, and why can what lang...
The article describes semantics and pragmatics of reflexive constructions. Common notes on the seman...
A transitive event involves two participants: an Agent, the doer of the action, and a Patient, the p...
Hebrew grammarians underst and passive clauses to function syntactically: Direct objects of active c...
This article provides an overview of the various means that languages use to represent interpretive ...
The present study examines how children vary perspective in describing events. In particular, it inv...
This paper identifies a number of empirically observable universals of reflexive marking that concer...
One of the questions addressed in this dissertation is which grammatical category should be assigned...
This article analyzes the factors determining the use of dedicated reflexives in natural language. I...
To explain the phenomenon that certain English verbs resist passivization (e.g., *£5 was cost by the...
Starting from the basic observation that, across languages, the anticausative variant of an alternat...
This article discusses the continuity of passive and spontaneous, focusing on non marked actor in pa...
Tyvan reflexive voice has a seemingly wide range of use. This paper divides the Tyvan reflexive into...
Previous approaches to the passive development from a reflexive marking focus on how the former is s...
Anna Siewierska and Dik Bakker seek to establish whether passives with agents are more canonical tha...
Why do so many languages employ special means to express reflexive predicates, and why can what lang...
The article describes semantics and pragmatics of reflexive constructions. Common notes on the seman...
A transitive event involves two participants: an Agent, the doer of the action, and a Patient, the p...
Hebrew grammarians underst and passive clauses to function syntactically: Direct objects of active c...
This article provides an overview of the various means that languages use to represent interpretive ...
The present study examines how children vary perspective in describing events. In particular, it inv...
This paper identifies a number of empirically observable universals of reflexive marking that concer...
One of the questions addressed in this dissertation is which grammatical category should be assigned...
This article analyzes the factors determining the use of dedicated reflexives in natural language. I...
To explain the phenomenon that certain English verbs resist passivization (e.g., *£5 was cost by the...
Starting from the basic observation that, across languages, the anticausative variant of an alternat...
This article discusses the continuity of passive and spontaneous, focusing on non marked actor in pa...
Tyvan reflexive voice has a seemingly wide range of use. This paper divides the Tyvan reflexive into...