While previous research on collective nouns in Romance languages mostly adopts a semasiological and theoretical perspective focusing mainly on one single language, the present study takes an onomasiological and comparative approach which is strongly based on empirical evidence. Against this background and in analogy to the verbal domain, the work elaborates further the functional category of nominal aspectuality which describes the construal of extra-linguistic entities as well as the linguistic means reflecting it. In this sense, collective nouns are systematically compared with other (nominal) means of expression of collectivity in French, Spanish, Italian and Portuguese, focusing especially on object mass nouns, which have hardly been st...
The work presents a number of cross-linguistic descriptive generalizations concerning Romance langua...
This article provides an overview of particle verbs in the Romance languages. In particular, I surve...
International audienceIn standard romance languages, systems of plural marking are relatively simple...
While previous research on collective nouns in Romance languages mostly adopts a semasiological and ...
Kleineberg D. The expression of “collectivity” in Romance. An empirical analysis of nominal aspectua...
This article provides a comprehensive overview of prefixation in Romance languages putting in relati...
Kleineberg D. Collective nouns as a derivational category in the Romance languages. In: Hennecke I, ...
This work is focused on the grammatical status of degree words in Romance languages. The analysis pr...
This chapter reviews the role played by linguistic evidence from the Romance languages in shaping co...
Romance nouns show a well-known morphological isogloss. There are two groups of languages: those plu...
Interactions between Semantic and Verbal Aspects in Romance Languages: Examples in French and Itali...
This synchronic study presents a new onomasiological, frame-theoretical model for the description, c...
Inflectional languages, and Romance languages in particular, display morphological variation in plur...
International audienceRomance nouns show a well-known morphological isogloss. There are two groups o...
Lexicological and lexicographical studies on multiword expressions in Romance languages have signifi...
The work presents a number of cross-linguistic descriptive generalizations concerning Romance langua...
This article provides an overview of particle verbs in the Romance languages. In particular, I surve...
International audienceIn standard romance languages, systems of plural marking are relatively simple...
While previous research on collective nouns in Romance languages mostly adopts a semasiological and ...
Kleineberg D. The expression of “collectivity” in Romance. An empirical analysis of nominal aspectua...
This article provides a comprehensive overview of prefixation in Romance languages putting in relati...
Kleineberg D. Collective nouns as a derivational category in the Romance languages. In: Hennecke I, ...
This work is focused on the grammatical status of degree words in Romance languages. The analysis pr...
This chapter reviews the role played by linguistic evidence from the Romance languages in shaping co...
Romance nouns show a well-known morphological isogloss. There are two groups of languages: those plu...
Interactions between Semantic and Verbal Aspects in Romance Languages: Examples in French and Itali...
This synchronic study presents a new onomasiological, frame-theoretical model for the description, c...
Inflectional languages, and Romance languages in particular, display morphological variation in plur...
International audienceRomance nouns show a well-known morphological isogloss. There are two groups o...
Lexicological and lexicographical studies on multiword expressions in Romance languages have signifi...
The work presents a number of cross-linguistic descriptive generalizations concerning Romance langua...
This article provides an overview of particle verbs in the Romance languages. In particular, I surve...
International audienceIn standard romance languages, systems of plural marking are relatively simple...