- German Literature and Culture Studies
- Spanish Linguistics and Language Studies
- Syntax, Semantics, Linguistic Variation
- Historical Linguistics and Language Studies
- Linguistics and Discourse Analysis
- Diverse Scientific and Economic Studies
- Linguistic research and analysis
- Linguistics and language evolution
- Historical, Literary, and Cultural Studies
- French Language Learning Methods
- Basque language and culture studies
- Linguistic Education and Pedagogy
- Arts, Culture, and Music Studies
- Linguistic Studies and Language Acquisition
- Historical and Modern Theater Studies
- Medieval European Literature and History
- Phonetics and Phonology Research
- Public Administration and Political Analysis
- Natural Language Processing Techniques
- Linguistics and Language Studies
- Media, Journalism, and Communication History
- Linguistic Variation and Morphology
- Cultural and Mythological Studies
- Journalism and Media Studies
- German History and Society
University of Konstanz
2010-2024
Deutsche Nationalbibliothek
2020-2023
University of Wuppertal
2003-2021
University of Zurich
2017
Klinikum Saarbrücken
2003
Universität Hamburg
1999
Abstract In the present article, we assume that adult French is an object-drop language in which complex object clitic + verb licenses and identifies a pro object. analysis of speech German-French bilingual boy, observed two major developmental phases. The first phase was characterized by drop similar to seen Chinese. second acquisition paradigm shift: adult-like morphological licensing mechanism. This coincides with development C-system (Complementizer System) its target form. Our account,...
ABSTRACT This paper sets out to contribute the debate on morpho-syntactic status of phonologically weak or clitic subject pronouns in Colloquial French by discussing finite impersonal constructions which expletive pronoun is non-expressed. The provides arguments against an approach terms inflectional affixes, showing that non-expression this fact syntactically restricted. On basis further finding represents continuation a grammatical trait older stages language was generally possible,...
In this article, we reconsider the syntactical analysis as well categorial status of two Medieval French elements, et and ne. connection, illustrate compare various approaches which principally differ with regard to assignment a unique category or categories these elements. context comparison, address some questions pertaining their motivations evidence has been offered in favor, showing that assign ne, respectively, prove be empirically more adequate.
Aikaterini-Lida Kalouli, Rebecca Kehlbeck, Rita Sevastjanova, Katharina Kaiser, Georg A. Miriam Butt. Proceedings of the 1st International Workshop on Computational Approaches to Historical Language Change. 2019.