International audienceThis paper investigates the sociolinguistic factors that impact the typology and evolution of grammatical gender systems in northwestern Bantu, the most diverse area of the Bantu-speaking world. We base our analyses on a typological classification of 179 northwestern Bantu languages, focusing on various instances of semantic agreement and their role in the erosion of gender marking. In addition, we conduct in-depth analyses of the sociolinguistics and population history of the 17 languages of the sample with the most eroded gender systems. The sociohistorical factors identified to explain these highly eroded systems are then translated into a set of explanatory variables, which we use to conduct extensive quantitative ...
This paper reviews the treatment of gender systems in Niger-Congo languages. Our discussion is based...
The concept of gender has three faces. Natural gender (N-gender, or sex), Social gender (S-gender), ...
International audienceIt is generally assumed that all nouns belong to a gender in gender languages ...
This paper investigates the sociolinguistic factors that impact the typology and evolution of gramma...
Northwestern Bantu is the most linguistically diverse area of the Bantu-speaking world. Several unu...
The present study investigates the gender systems of 20 languages in the New Guinea region, an often...
This dissertation investigates interactions between gender and number and gender and evaluative morp...
The present study classifies gender systems of 20 languages in the New Guinea region, an often negle...
The many facets of grammatical gender remain one of the most fruitful areas of linguistic research, ...
This article offers a distributional corpus analysis of the Northern Sotho noun and gender system. T...
This paper proposes a set of principles and methodologies for the crosslinguistic investigation of g...
We give an overview of current research questions pursued in connection with an ongoing project on n...
The many facets of grammatical gender remain one of the most fruitful areas of linguistic research, ...
Gender in Chichewa is described as a complete system. First the basic data on gender agreement are p...
Gender in Chichewa is described as a complete system. First the basic data on gender agreement are p...
This paper reviews the treatment of gender systems in Niger-Congo languages. Our discussion is based...
The concept of gender has three faces. Natural gender (N-gender, or sex), Social gender (S-gender), ...
International audienceIt is generally assumed that all nouns belong to a gender in gender languages ...
This paper investigates the sociolinguistic factors that impact the typology and evolution of gramma...
Northwestern Bantu is the most linguistically diverse area of the Bantu-speaking world. Several unu...
The present study investigates the gender systems of 20 languages in the New Guinea region, an often...
This dissertation investigates interactions between gender and number and gender and evaluative morp...
The present study classifies gender systems of 20 languages in the New Guinea region, an often negle...
The many facets of grammatical gender remain one of the most fruitful areas of linguistic research, ...
This article offers a distributional corpus analysis of the Northern Sotho noun and gender system. T...
This paper proposes a set of principles and methodologies for the crosslinguistic investigation of g...
We give an overview of current research questions pursued in connection with an ongoing project on n...
The many facets of grammatical gender remain one of the most fruitful areas of linguistic research, ...
Gender in Chichewa is described as a complete system. First the basic data on gender agreement are p...
Gender in Chichewa is described as a complete system. First the basic data on gender agreement are p...
This paper reviews the treatment of gender systems in Niger-Congo languages. Our discussion is based...
The concept of gender has three faces. Natural gender (N-gender, or sex), Social gender (S-gender), ...
International audienceIt is generally assumed that all nouns belong to a gender in gender languages ...