This study discusses lexical preferences as a factor affecting the word order variation in Dutch verbal clusters. There are two grammatical word orders for Dutch two-verb clusters, with no clear meaning difference. Using the method of collostructional analysis, I find significant associations between specific verbs and word orders, and argue that these associations must be encoded in the lexicon as lexical preferences. In my data, the word orders also show some semantic associations, indicating that there might be a meaning difference after all. Based on these findings, I conclude that both word orders are stored in the lexicon as constructions
Direct objects in the Dutch middlefield can either precede adverbs or follow them. This word order v...
Direct objects in the Dutch middlefield can either precede adverbs or follow them. This word order v...
Dutch allows for variation as to whether the first position in the sentence is occupied by the subje...
In theory, linguists' lives are becoming easier due to the increasing availability of digital texts ...
This article is a case study in how quantitative-statistical and formal-theoretical (generative) app...
We examine a case of word order variation where speakers choose between two near-synonymous construc...
A generalization that has emerged in the literature on verb clusters in West Germanic languages is ...
Although sentence final verbal clusters in dialects of Dutch demonstrate a large amount of variation...
Dutch is well-known for its verb clusters, i.e. constructions in which multiple verbs group together...
Please be advised that this information was generated on 2016-05-17 and may be subject to change. Su...
This thesis provides a novel analysis of the word order variation in three-verb clusters reported in...
The present paper empirically investigates the relation between diachronic change and synchronic var...
In this paper, we argue that ascending verb cluster orders (1-2 and 1-2-3, e.g. moet eten ‘must eat’...
This article presents the results from a corpus-based investigation of the word order variation obse...
This paper demonstrates that Dutch not only has verb clusters but also adposition clusters. It ident...
Direct objects in the Dutch middlefield can either precede adverbs or follow them. This word order v...
Direct objects in the Dutch middlefield can either precede adverbs or follow them. This word order v...
Dutch allows for variation as to whether the first position in the sentence is occupied by the subje...
In theory, linguists' lives are becoming easier due to the increasing availability of digital texts ...
This article is a case study in how quantitative-statistical and formal-theoretical (generative) app...
We examine a case of word order variation where speakers choose between two near-synonymous construc...
A generalization that has emerged in the literature on verb clusters in West Germanic languages is ...
Although sentence final verbal clusters in dialects of Dutch demonstrate a large amount of variation...
Dutch is well-known for its verb clusters, i.e. constructions in which multiple verbs group together...
Please be advised that this information was generated on 2016-05-17 and may be subject to change. Su...
This thesis provides a novel analysis of the word order variation in three-verb clusters reported in...
The present paper empirically investigates the relation between diachronic change and synchronic var...
In this paper, we argue that ascending verb cluster orders (1-2 and 1-2-3, e.g. moet eten ‘must eat’...
This article presents the results from a corpus-based investigation of the word order variation obse...
This paper demonstrates that Dutch not only has verb clusters but also adposition clusters. It ident...
Direct objects in the Dutch middlefield can either precede adverbs or follow them. This word order v...
Direct objects in the Dutch middlefield can either precede adverbs or follow them. This word order v...
Dutch allows for variation as to whether the first position in the sentence is occupied by the subje...