This brief paper examines three constructions attested in the Old Irish glosses. The relationship between flagging of arguments (case marking and adpositions) and predicate meaning is addressed for two very frequent transitive verbs used in a metalinguistic sense, beirid fri/do ‘refer to’ and do·beir ar ‘put/say/write for’, and for a third verb, do·fich, usually translated with ‘punish’ or ‘avenge’ but whose valency pattern differs from that of English ‘punish’. The data from the glosses suggest variation in the selection of the preposition with beirid, consistency in the alignment of case marking with semantic roles for do·fich, and a possible semantic distinction between do·beir ar + dative ‘put, say for’ and do·beir ar + accusative ‘exch...
This corpus-based study examines the use of support verb constructions in Old English and Old Irish....
The paper discusses the range of complementation patterns available to regular action nominalization...
This corpus-based study examines the use of support verb constructions in Old English and Old Irish....
This brief paper examines three constructions attested in the Old Irish glosses. The relationship be...
This paper compares argument marking of finite and non-finite forms (verbal nouns) of 26 Old Irish v...
This thesis concerns the word formation of secondary verbs in Old Irish. Although extensive work has...
This paper compares argument marking of finite and non-finite forms (verbal nouns) of 26 Old Irish v...
This paper examines subject-verb agreement in Early-Irish sentences with coordinate subjects. We cl...
The paper examines all the occurrences of Head Noun + Genitive Noun in the Würzburg Glosses, in orde...
This paper examines subject-verb agreement in Early-Irish sentences with coordinate subjects. We cl...
This article is concerned with some fine-grained distinctions in the syntax of subjects ...
This article is concerned with some fine-grained distinctions in the syntax of subjects ...
Old Irish has three categories at its disposal for the formation of secondary verbs: the ā-verbs, th...
International audienceAs is well known, Old Irish presented a morphological and functional distincti...
This is a multi-authored volume which gathers essays devoted to Early Irish presented at the XIV Int...
This corpus-based study examines the use of support verb constructions in Old English and Old Irish....
The paper discusses the range of complementation patterns available to regular action nominalization...
This corpus-based study examines the use of support verb constructions in Old English and Old Irish....
This brief paper examines three constructions attested in the Old Irish glosses. The relationship be...
This paper compares argument marking of finite and non-finite forms (verbal nouns) of 26 Old Irish v...
This thesis concerns the word formation of secondary verbs in Old Irish. Although extensive work has...
This paper compares argument marking of finite and non-finite forms (verbal nouns) of 26 Old Irish v...
This paper examines subject-verb agreement in Early-Irish sentences with coordinate subjects. We cl...
The paper examines all the occurrences of Head Noun + Genitive Noun in the Würzburg Glosses, in orde...
This paper examines subject-verb agreement in Early-Irish sentences with coordinate subjects. We cl...
This article is concerned with some fine-grained distinctions in the syntax of subjects ...
This article is concerned with some fine-grained distinctions in the syntax of subjects ...
Old Irish has three categories at its disposal for the formation of secondary verbs: the ā-verbs, th...
International audienceAs is well known, Old Irish presented a morphological and functional distincti...
This is a multi-authored volume which gathers essays devoted to Early Irish presented at the XIV Int...
This corpus-based study examines the use of support verb constructions in Old English and Old Irish....
The paper discusses the range of complementation patterns available to regular action nominalization...
This corpus-based study examines the use of support verb constructions in Old English and Old Irish....