This article argues that Differential Argument Indexing (DOI) and Differential Argument Marking (DOM) constructions in Coptic (Afroasiatic, Egypt) are reanalyzed, resulting in a set of verbs with interposed P-indexes within bipartite stems (DeLancey 1996; Nichols 2003). Basically, incorporated noun phrases with prefixed possessor indexes become parts of derived verbs with unpredictable lexical semantics, and their erstwhile possessor prefixes, entrapped within the derived verb, are reanalyzed as P-interpositions. Since this possessor prefix ultimately developed from an earlier possessor suffix, the pathway documented here, stripped down to its essentials, is suffix → prefix → interposition, and erstwhile com- plex construction → bipartite s...
In this talk, we present the main prohibitive/negative jussive strategies attested for each state of...
This paper investigates the evolution of Differential Object Marking (DOM) in Abui and Teiwa, two Pa...
International audienceThis paper proposes a new analysis of various morphological features character...
Given a worldwide preference for suffixes over prefixes, why do some languages nonetheless have a ma...
This chapter discusses the prepositional marking of the second argument in Bohairic Coptic complex v...
This dissertation investigates the demonstratives in Old Egyptian. It shows that the proper descript...
It has repeatedly been observed that there is a worldwide preference for suffixes as opposed to pref...
It has been repeatedly observed, on the basis of typological ‘big data,’ that there is a worldwide p...
The first appearance of the emphatic demonstratives pA/tA/nA in northern Egyptian letters of the 6th...
This paper seeks to clarify the role of affectedness for the marking of direct objects through an an...
This comparative study examines the morphosyntactic parameters governing the distribution of ‘specia...
International audienceThis comparative study examines the morphosyntactic parameters governing the d...
This article discusses similar developments in the expression of negation in the histories of Egypti...
Many languages differentiate between different types of objects, commonly marking definite or highly...
This article treats a set of subject cross-referencing morphemes in the medieval Nilo-Saharan langua...
In this talk, we present the main prohibitive/negative jussive strategies attested for each state of...
This paper investigates the evolution of Differential Object Marking (DOM) in Abui and Teiwa, two Pa...
International audienceThis paper proposes a new analysis of various morphological features character...
Given a worldwide preference for suffixes over prefixes, why do some languages nonetheless have a ma...
This chapter discusses the prepositional marking of the second argument in Bohairic Coptic complex v...
This dissertation investigates the demonstratives in Old Egyptian. It shows that the proper descript...
It has repeatedly been observed that there is a worldwide preference for suffixes as opposed to pref...
It has been repeatedly observed, on the basis of typological ‘big data,’ that there is a worldwide p...
The first appearance of the emphatic demonstratives pA/tA/nA in northern Egyptian letters of the 6th...
This paper seeks to clarify the role of affectedness for the marking of direct objects through an an...
This comparative study examines the morphosyntactic parameters governing the distribution of ‘specia...
International audienceThis comparative study examines the morphosyntactic parameters governing the d...
This article discusses similar developments in the expression of negation in the histories of Egypti...
Many languages differentiate between different types of objects, commonly marking definite or highly...
This article treats a set of subject cross-referencing morphemes in the medieval Nilo-Saharan langua...
In this talk, we present the main prohibitive/negative jussive strategies attested for each state of...
This paper investigates the evolution of Differential Object Marking (DOM) in Abui and Teiwa, two Pa...
International audienceThis paper proposes a new analysis of various morphological features character...