This paper investigates the development of a few Latin deverbal prepositions, whose sources are both present and perfect participles occurring in non-finite adverbial clauses. The category shift under examination may be described as a typical case of transcategorization, and is discussed here in line with the ‘non-discreteness hypothesis of the Parts-of-Speech’. Traditionally, the development of deverbal prepositions is taken to involve a cluster of factors. The working hypothesis presented here is that not just a cluster of factors, but two separate dimensions play a role in this change. Transcategorization cannot be predicted from language-specific features alone, but is subject to precise semantico-pragmatic conditions, which can ultimat...
This chapter of the Historical Latin Syntax traces the evolution and use of predicative possessive c...
Though the Latin language seems to have been rather stable and have undergone few changes even in th...
Au VIème siècle après J.-Ch., les structures de la langue latine ne correspondent plus tout à fait a...
Among others, there are a few Latin deverbal prepositions, whose sources are present participles tha...
In Latin, as in other Indo-European languages, the present participle is a hybrid form which partake...
Major lexical items, such as verbs or nouns may undergo, through time, mor- phophonological and sema...
This thesis deals with a category of prepositions and its processing in works of late antique Latin ...
The present paper is concerned with investigating the relationship between prepositions and preverbs...
This chapter explores the competition between the use of the dative case and the prepositional const...
We intend to analyse the semantic network of the preposition ‘per’ (“through”, “across” etc.) in Ear...
A study on the grammaticalization of deverbal, denominal and deadjectival prepositions in French out...
In this paper it is argued that deverbal modifiers of the noun are mixed categories that, both in Ge...
This paper explores the semantic network of the Early Latin preposition de (“from”) on the basis of ...
The paper describes the semantic network of the Early Latin preverb per- and its relation with the c...
The paper describes the semantic network of the Early Latin preverb per- and its relation with the c...
This chapter of the Historical Latin Syntax traces the evolution and use of predicative possessive c...
Though the Latin language seems to have been rather stable and have undergone few changes even in th...
Au VIème siècle après J.-Ch., les structures de la langue latine ne correspondent plus tout à fait a...
Among others, there are a few Latin deverbal prepositions, whose sources are present participles tha...
In Latin, as in other Indo-European languages, the present participle is a hybrid form which partake...
Major lexical items, such as verbs or nouns may undergo, through time, mor- phophonological and sema...
This thesis deals with a category of prepositions and its processing in works of late antique Latin ...
The present paper is concerned with investigating the relationship between prepositions and preverbs...
This chapter explores the competition between the use of the dative case and the prepositional const...
We intend to analyse the semantic network of the preposition ‘per’ (“through”, “across” etc.) in Ear...
A study on the grammaticalization of deverbal, denominal and deadjectival prepositions in French out...
In this paper it is argued that deverbal modifiers of the noun are mixed categories that, both in Ge...
This paper explores the semantic network of the Early Latin preposition de (“from”) on the basis of ...
The paper describes the semantic network of the Early Latin preverb per- and its relation with the c...
The paper describes the semantic network of the Early Latin preverb per- and its relation with the c...
This chapter of the Historical Latin Syntax traces the evolution and use of predicative possessive c...
Though the Latin language seems to have been rather stable and have undergone few changes even in th...
Au VIème siècle après J.-Ch., les structures de la langue latine ne correspondent plus tout à fait a...