Just like the vast majority of the Germanic languages, the Scandinavian languages are verb second (V2) languages where the finite verb occupies the second position in declarative clauses allowing just one constituent to precede it
The paper discusses the relation between Verb Second and the derivation of topics in a comparative a...
This monograph investigates the syntax of the finite verb in Mòcheno, a minority language spoken in ...
This article investigates the information structure of verb-second (V2) declaratives in Swedish, Ger...
One of the most remarkable properties of the Germanic languages, with the apparent exception of Engl...
English is the only Germanic language known to have lost V2 word order in main clause declaratives. ...
In the field of Germanic linguistics, there has been a long-standing debate as to the question of ho...
North Germanic has Verb Second (V2) word order in main but not embedded clauses. Although as a first...
It is sometimes said that the so-called modal verbs cannot be "stacked " in English wherea...
I present the result of a small investigation of the sentence pattern in a sample of spoken Swedish....
This chapter provides an overview of the micro-variation in Norwegian when it comes to Verb Second (...
Verb-second order is a major syntactic organizing principle of most Germanic languages. Verb-second ...
The occurrence of V1 declaratives in Icelandic has attracted much attention in the generative litera...
This monograph investigates the syntax of the finite verb in Mòcheno, a minority language spoken in ...
Most main clauses in the Scandinavian languages are subject-initial, which combined with the V2 (ver...
This paper deals with pronominal subject doubling in three dialects of Dutch. We make a distinction ...
The paper discusses the relation between Verb Second and the derivation of topics in a comparative a...
This monograph investigates the syntax of the finite verb in Mòcheno, a minority language spoken in ...
This article investigates the information structure of verb-second (V2) declaratives in Swedish, Ger...
One of the most remarkable properties of the Germanic languages, with the apparent exception of Engl...
English is the only Germanic language known to have lost V2 word order in main clause declaratives. ...
In the field of Germanic linguistics, there has been a long-standing debate as to the question of ho...
North Germanic has Verb Second (V2) word order in main but not embedded clauses. Although as a first...
It is sometimes said that the so-called modal verbs cannot be "stacked " in English wherea...
I present the result of a small investigation of the sentence pattern in a sample of spoken Swedish....
This chapter provides an overview of the micro-variation in Norwegian when it comes to Verb Second (...
Verb-second order is a major syntactic organizing principle of most Germanic languages. Verb-second ...
The occurrence of V1 declaratives in Icelandic has attracted much attention in the generative litera...
This monograph investigates the syntax of the finite verb in Mòcheno, a minority language spoken in ...
Most main clauses in the Scandinavian languages are subject-initial, which combined with the V2 (ver...
This paper deals with pronominal subject doubling in three dialects of Dutch. We make a distinction ...
The paper discusses the relation between Verb Second and the derivation of topics in a comparative a...
This monograph investigates the syntax of the finite verb in Mòcheno, a minority language spoken in ...
This article investigates the information structure of verb-second (V2) declaratives in Swedish, Ger...