English ergative verbs in one-participant constructions such as ‘the door opens’ often correspond to reflexive verbs or -S forms in Norwegian and Swedish. Following Kemmer (1993), such constructions profile spontaneous-event meaning and belong to the middle domain. This study uses corpus methodology to explore spontaneous-event marking in Norwegian and Swedish from the point of view of Kemmer’s suggested two-cycle development path for middle marking in the Scandinavian languages. The results suggest that there are differences in the middle systems in the Scandinavian languages to the effect that Norwegian has completed Kemmer’s two cycles, whereas Swedish has not. Further, there is tentative indication that ergative verbs are on the increas...
\citet{Holmberg2002} proposes an account for the variation concerning expletives, participial agreem...
This article presents a diachronic study of clause-anticipating object constructions in the history ...
This study considers a contrast in Mainland Scandinavian with respect to co-occurrence of a suffixal...
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...
This paper examines the typological characteristics of causal–noncausal verb alternations in Norwegi...
May-Britt Marthinsen Smith: Initial ing clauses in English and their translation into Norwegian Sum...
This dissertation investigates the interaction of information from word order, morphology, lexical s...
This study presents a non-syntactic analysis of non-clause-bounded reflexives (LDR) in Norwegian. Ex...
This article discusses the fact that despite almost identical syntactically, the Mainland Scandinavi...
This paper investigates distributional patterns concerning the prefield and expletive subjects in tw...
This thesis observes the use of the prototypically functioning impersonal and objective rhetorical s...
This paper highlights the value of a bidirectional translation corpus in contrastive studies in an i...
Both the Swedish verb hinna and the Norwegian verb rekke have been shown to encode complex sufficien...
We investigate Differential Subject Marking in Nepali imperfective constructions. No previous accoun...
\citet{Holmberg2002} proposes an account for the variation concerning expletives, participial agreem...
This article presents a diachronic study of clause-anticipating object constructions in the history ...
This study considers a contrast in Mainland Scandinavian with respect to co-occurrence of a suffixal...
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...
This paper examines the typological characteristics of causal–noncausal verb alternations in Norwegi...
May-Britt Marthinsen Smith: Initial ing clauses in English and their translation into Norwegian Sum...
This dissertation investigates the interaction of information from word order, morphology, lexical s...
This study presents a non-syntactic analysis of non-clause-bounded reflexives (LDR) in Norwegian. Ex...
This article discusses the fact that despite almost identical syntactically, the Mainland Scandinavi...
This paper investigates distributional patterns concerning the prefield and expletive subjects in tw...
This thesis observes the use of the prototypically functioning impersonal and objective rhetorical s...
This paper highlights the value of a bidirectional translation corpus in contrastive studies in an i...
Both the Swedish verb hinna and the Norwegian verb rekke have been shown to encode complex sufficien...
We investigate Differential Subject Marking in Nepali imperfective constructions. No previous accoun...
\citet{Holmberg2002} proposes an account for the variation concerning expletives, participial agreem...
This article presents a diachronic study of clause-anticipating object constructions in the history ...
This study considers a contrast in Mainland Scandinavian with respect to co-occurrence of a suffixal...