Many ancient IE languages show a variety of expressions of predicative possession. Of these, some are constructions involving a verb form meaning ‘to be’ or ‘to exist’ in combination with an accompanying oblique case denoting the Possessor, while the Possessee NP is constructed as the grammatical subject in the nominative case controlling a verb agreement. This paper analyses possessive constructions from IE languages (Latin, Italic, Celtic, Ancient Greek, Baltic and Indo-Iranian) within the framework of Construction Grammar, in which the basic unit of language is the construction, i.e., a form-meaning pair larger than a word. Indeed, even though the literature on possession in IE languages is vast, recent studies show that a constr...
[Extract] Every language has a mechanism for expressing posession, within a noun phrase and with a c...
Possession and Ownership brings together linguists and anthropologists in a series of cross-linguist...
One of the often noted characteristic features of the Celtic languages is the absence of a singular ...
Many ancient IE languages show a variety of expressions of predicative possession. Of these, some ar...
As is well known, early Indo-European languages had different ways of expressing the predicative pos...
As is well known, early Indo-European languages had different ways of expressing the predicative pos...
It is worth mentioning Benveniste’s well-known 1960 study where, on the basis of examples from many ...
This chapter of the Historical Latin Syntax traces the evolution and use of predicative possessive c...
In this paper, we analyse the syntactic structures associated with predicative possession in Alban...
This paper presents a description and an analysis of predicative possession in Latin in the light of...
This topic became central to typological linguistics in the second half of the 1990s. Since then qui...
Two external possessor constructions occur in ancient Indo-European languages: the dative external ...
The paper focuses on distribution and correlation of semantic features distinguished within scope of...
<p><strong>ON ONE CASE OF THE EXPRESSION OF POSSESSIVITY IN OLD LITHUANIAN WRITINGS</strong></p><p>...
The paper discusses the expression of possessivity by means of the construction ‘the verb to be + Ad...
[Extract] Every language has a mechanism for expressing posession, within a noun phrase and with a c...
Possession and Ownership brings together linguists and anthropologists in a series of cross-linguist...
One of the often noted characteristic features of the Celtic languages is the absence of a singular ...
Many ancient IE languages show a variety of expressions of predicative possession. Of these, some ar...
As is well known, early Indo-European languages had different ways of expressing the predicative pos...
As is well known, early Indo-European languages had different ways of expressing the predicative pos...
It is worth mentioning Benveniste’s well-known 1960 study where, on the basis of examples from many ...
This chapter of the Historical Latin Syntax traces the evolution and use of predicative possessive c...
In this paper, we analyse the syntactic structures associated with predicative possession in Alban...
This paper presents a description and an analysis of predicative possession in Latin in the light of...
This topic became central to typological linguistics in the second half of the 1990s. Since then qui...
Two external possessor constructions occur in ancient Indo-European languages: the dative external ...
The paper focuses on distribution and correlation of semantic features distinguished within scope of...
<p><strong>ON ONE CASE OF THE EXPRESSION OF POSSESSIVITY IN OLD LITHUANIAN WRITINGS</strong></p><p>...
The paper discusses the expression of possessivity by means of the construction ‘the verb to be + Ad...
[Extract] Every language has a mechanism for expressing posession, within a noun phrase and with a c...
Possession and Ownership brings together linguists and anthropologists in a series of cross-linguist...
One of the often noted characteristic features of the Celtic languages is the absence of a singular ...