This article examines the syntax of subject clitics in northern Italian dialects. Statistical analysis is performed on a sample of 350 dialects to show that the co-variation between syntactic variables is significant. The variables under examination are the occurrence of subject clitics with non-dislocated subjects (e.g., the wh element who); the occurrence of subject clitics with nonthematic predicates (e.g., weather verbs); and the occurrence of subject clitics with subjects of any person. Syntactic variables are in turn linked to verbal agreement; in the above contexts, clitics are more readily found in dialects with “poor” inflection. Theoretical issues concerning the syntactic representation of subject clitics, null subjects, and doubl...
In this paper we describe the distribution of subject clitics in nominal copular constructions in th...
In this paper we describe the distribution of subject clitics in nominal copular constructions in th...
Romance languages have complement clitic pronouns that replace the arguments of a verb. Only a sub-a...
The present article aims at illustrating methodologies, objectives and results of the ASIt project (...
This study investigates the phenomenon of subject clitic (henceforth, SCl) variation in Ligurian, a ...
This study investigates the phenomenon of subject clitic (henceforth, SCl) variation in Ligurian, a ...
In recent years, there has been much published on the topic of subject clitic pronouns in the northe...
In this paper we argue that preverbal and postverbal subject clitics in northern Italian dialects ar...
The present article aims at illustrating methodologies, objectives and results of the ASIt project (...
The unstressed subject pronouns of northern Italian dialects (NIDs) are usually considered (clitic) ...
This article examines the interaction between subject clitics of northern Italian dialects and the c...
Practically all Romance languages have complement clitic pronouns which basically replace the argume...
Expletive subject clitics (ESCs) are pronominal elements that occur in impersonal contexts with whic...
This book deals with the syntax of the subject in various sentence types in the Northern Italian dom...
In this paper we describe the distribution of subject clitics in nominal copular constructions in th...
In this paper we describe the distribution of subject clitics in nominal copular constructions in th...
Romance languages have complement clitic pronouns that replace the arguments of a verb. Only a sub-a...
The present article aims at illustrating methodologies, objectives and results of the ASIt project (...
This study investigates the phenomenon of subject clitic (henceforth, SCl) variation in Ligurian, a ...
This study investigates the phenomenon of subject clitic (henceforth, SCl) variation in Ligurian, a ...
In recent years, there has been much published on the topic of subject clitic pronouns in the northe...
In this paper we argue that preverbal and postverbal subject clitics in northern Italian dialects ar...
The present article aims at illustrating methodologies, objectives and results of the ASIt project (...
The unstressed subject pronouns of northern Italian dialects (NIDs) are usually considered (clitic) ...
This article examines the interaction between subject clitics of northern Italian dialects and the c...
Practically all Romance languages have complement clitic pronouns which basically replace the argume...
Expletive subject clitics (ESCs) are pronominal elements that occur in impersonal contexts with whic...
This book deals with the syntax of the subject in various sentence types in the Northern Italian dom...
In this paper we describe the distribution of subject clitics in nominal copular constructions in th...
In this paper we describe the distribution of subject clitics in nominal copular constructions in th...
Romance languages have complement clitic pronouns that replace the arguments of a verb. Only a sub-a...