Object shift (OS) is a word order phenomenon in Scandinavian languages where under some circumstances the object appears before a sentential adverb. Despite the frequent assumptions that word order is determined in syntax, and despite the link of OS and syntactic phenomena like V2, there is no consensus that OS is a syntactic phenomenon. Particularly, it has been observed that OS targets specifically prosodically weak elements. This motivated recent analyses of OS as a prosodic phenomenon. We focus on two proposals that look for a synchronic motivation for OS in a correlation between its distribution and some prosodic property: (i) Erteschik-Shir et al. (2020) posit that OS is motivated and modulated by prosodic incorporation, and (ii) Hoso...
In this paper we discuss the phenomenon of Object Shift in Norwegian, and we show that this operatio...
In this project I attempt to shed light on an array of interacting syntactic phenomena relatin...
This article reports on a syntactic acceptability judgement study of 59 adult L2/Ln learners of Norw...
Object shift (OS) is a word order phenomenon in Scandinavian languages where under some circumstance...
The thesis discusses Object Shift, weak pronoun shift in the Scandinavian languages, from the intona...
One significant contribution of generative linguistics has been to our understanding of 'movement,' ...
The problem addressed in this paper is a case of word order microvariation in Mainland Scandinavian:...
The problem addressed in this paper is a case of word order microvariation in Mainland Scandinavian:...
Object shift in Scandinavian and scrambling in West Germanic have the same information-structural tr...
Recent work on Object Shift (OS) suggests that this is not as uniform an operation as traditionally ...
The topic of my article is Object Shift and optionality, mainly from a Swedish viewpoint. I present ...
In this article, I give a status report and present data from an ongo-ing investigation of the under...
This study investigates two word order phenomena in Norwegian heritage language spoken in the US, su...
The fact that object shift only affects weak pronouns in mainland Scandinavian is seen as an instanc...
This paper presents results from a corpus investigation of written Swedish and Danish. The results s...
In this paper we discuss the phenomenon of Object Shift in Norwegian, and we show that this operatio...
In this project I attempt to shed light on an array of interacting syntactic phenomena relatin...
This article reports on a syntactic acceptability judgement study of 59 adult L2/Ln learners of Norw...
Object shift (OS) is a word order phenomenon in Scandinavian languages where under some circumstance...
The thesis discusses Object Shift, weak pronoun shift in the Scandinavian languages, from the intona...
One significant contribution of generative linguistics has been to our understanding of 'movement,' ...
The problem addressed in this paper is a case of word order microvariation in Mainland Scandinavian:...
The problem addressed in this paper is a case of word order microvariation in Mainland Scandinavian:...
Object shift in Scandinavian and scrambling in West Germanic have the same information-structural tr...
Recent work on Object Shift (OS) suggests that this is not as uniform an operation as traditionally ...
The topic of my article is Object Shift and optionality, mainly from a Swedish viewpoint. I present ...
In this article, I give a status report and present data from an ongo-ing investigation of the under...
This study investigates two word order phenomena in Norwegian heritage language spoken in the US, su...
The fact that object shift only affects weak pronouns in mainland Scandinavian is seen as an instanc...
This paper presents results from a corpus investigation of written Swedish and Danish. The results s...
In this paper we discuss the phenomenon of Object Shift in Norwegian, and we show that this operatio...
In this project I attempt to shed light on an array of interacting syntactic phenomena relatin...
This article reports on a syntactic acceptability judgement study of 59 adult L2/Ln learners of Norw...