he development of the Sanskrit passive past participle and gerund or passive verbal adjective of obligation in Indo-Aryan are up to a certain point parallel and resulted respectively in an ergative alignment in past sentences in Western languages and a nominative realignment in both future and past in Eastern languages. Only Eastern languages grammaticalized the old endings into the specific temporal markers -l- for past and -b- for future, while throughout the IA area the obligative passive verbal adjective also evolved into an infinitive. The aim of the paper is to account for the various grammaticalization paths of these forms in a unified manner, taking into account the whole range of other competing constructions in the various IA lang...
Item does not contain fulltextThe nominative/accusative to ergative/absolutive shift in Indo-Aryan h...
The paper aims at linking the historic evolution of the past and perfect system in Indo-Aryan (with ...
This paper focuses on the evolution of the Old Indo-Aryan reciprocal pronoun anyo'nya- as well as so...
The paper aims at linking the historic evolution of the past and perfect system in Indo-Aryan (with ...
I investigate how verbal aspect was expressed in multiple Sanskrit and Middle Indic language varieti...
This paper deals with the passive function of the middle diathesis in Vedic Sanskrit, one of the mos...
The present paper deals with the passive function of the middle diathesis in Sanskrit, one of the mo...
The IE languages developed different strategies for the encoding of the passive function. In some la...
The paper deals with the diachrony of the past and perfect system in Indo-Aryan with special referen...
The IE languages developed different strategies for the encoding of the passive function. In some l...
The paper deals with the diachrony of the past and perfect system in Indo-Aryan with special referen...
The parallel evolution of the construction of perfect and modal future from Sanskrit to early Indo-A...
This paper examines early inflectional morphology related to the tense-aspect system of Proto-Indo-E...
In this paper, we will examine the usage of Gerund, Infinitive and Present Participle. It seems to u...
The paper aims at linking the historic evolution of the past and perfect system in Indo-Aryan (with ...
Item does not contain fulltextThe nominative/accusative to ergative/absolutive shift in Indo-Aryan h...
The paper aims at linking the historic evolution of the past and perfect system in Indo-Aryan (with ...
This paper focuses on the evolution of the Old Indo-Aryan reciprocal pronoun anyo'nya- as well as so...
The paper aims at linking the historic evolution of the past and perfect system in Indo-Aryan (with ...
I investigate how verbal aspect was expressed in multiple Sanskrit and Middle Indic language varieti...
This paper deals with the passive function of the middle diathesis in Vedic Sanskrit, one of the mos...
The present paper deals with the passive function of the middle diathesis in Sanskrit, one of the mo...
The IE languages developed different strategies for the encoding of the passive function. In some la...
The paper deals with the diachrony of the past and perfect system in Indo-Aryan with special referen...
The IE languages developed different strategies for the encoding of the passive function. In some l...
The paper deals with the diachrony of the past and perfect system in Indo-Aryan with special referen...
The parallel evolution of the construction of perfect and modal future from Sanskrit to early Indo-A...
This paper examines early inflectional morphology related to the tense-aspect system of Proto-Indo-E...
In this paper, we will examine the usage of Gerund, Infinitive and Present Participle. It seems to u...
The paper aims at linking the historic evolution of the past and perfect system in Indo-Aryan (with ...
Item does not contain fulltextThe nominative/accusative to ergative/absolutive shift in Indo-Aryan h...
The paper aims at linking the historic evolution of the past and perfect system in Indo-Aryan (with ...
This paper focuses on the evolution of the Old Indo-Aryan reciprocal pronoun anyo'nya- as well as so...