This paper examines the typological characteristics of causal–noncausal verb alternations in Norwegian. To be more specific, the direction of formal basic–derived relationships in 31 causal–noncausal verb pairs in Norwegian is analyzed based on the verb list proposed by Haspelmath (1993). Moreover, a comparison is made between Norwegian and other Germanic languages. There are three major findings that this paper presents. First, Norwegian shows a great propensity for anticausative and labile coding. Second, Norwegian is similar to German in terms of the propensity for anticausative and labile coding. By contrast, English shows a dominant preference for labile coding, and Swedish for anticausative coding. Third, the direction of formal deriv...
This study investigates multiple indefi nite determiners in structures involving adjectival modifi c...
Abstract The loss of inflectional categories is often thought of as a type of simplification. In thi...
Scandinavian has a class of negative determiners which correspond in meaning to English no (e.g. in ...
In this paper we will discuss cross-linguistic variation in semantic entailment patterns in causativ...
This study examines two examples of grammatical variation in Norwegian inflection, strong versus wea...
English ergative verbs in one-participant constructions such as ‘the door opens’ often correspond to...
English ergative verbs in one-participant constructions such as ‘the door opens’ often correspond to...
The position of the verb(s) in embedded non-V2 contexts varies in Norwegian dialects. In Eastern Nor...
English ergative verbs in one-participant constructions such as ‘The door opens’ often correspond to...
The study looks at 4 variants of negative clitics in Norwegian, how frequently they are used and whi...
(i) Independent V˚-to-I ˚ movement is possible in Northern Norwegian despite the scarcity of agreeme...
The study looks at 4 variants of negative clitics in Norwegian, how frequently they are used and whi...
In this paper, we demonstrate that adjective endings in the Germanic languages do not pattern unifor...
Causal relations are central to the way humans perceive and interpret the interplay between states o...
Demonstratives are referring expressions that exist in all languages. English and Norwegian are no e...
This study investigates multiple indefi nite determiners in structures involving adjectival modifi c...
Abstract The loss of inflectional categories is often thought of as a type of simplification. In thi...
Scandinavian has a class of negative determiners which correspond in meaning to English no (e.g. in ...
In this paper we will discuss cross-linguistic variation in semantic entailment patterns in causativ...
This study examines two examples of grammatical variation in Norwegian inflection, strong versus wea...
English ergative verbs in one-participant constructions such as ‘the door opens’ often correspond to...
English ergative verbs in one-participant constructions such as ‘the door opens’ often correspond to...
The position of the verb(s) in embedded non-V2 contexts varies in Norwegian dialects. In Eastern Nor...
English ergative verbs in one-participant constructions such as ‘The door opens’ often correspond to...
The study looks at 4 variants of negative clitics in Norwegian, how frequently they are used and whi...
(i) Independent V˚-to-I ˚ movement is possible in Northern Norwegian despite the scarcity of agreeme...
The study looks at 4 variants of negative clitics in Norwegian, how frequently they are used and whi...
In this paper, we demonstrate that adjective endings in the Germanic languages do not pattern unifor...
Causal relations are central to the way humans perceive and interpret the interplay between states o...
Demonstratives are referring expressions that exist in all languages. English and Norwegian are no e...
This study investigates multiple indefi nite determiners in structures involving adjectival modifi c...
Abstract The loss of inflectional categories is often thought of as a type of simplification. In thi...
Scandinavian has a class of negative determiners which correspond in meaning to English no (e.g. in ...