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Age effects in first language attrition: speech perception by Korean-English bilinguals
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Intersecting constraint families: An argument for harmonic grammar
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In: Language, vol 93, iss 3 (2017)
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Prefixal vowel length in Lulamogi: A stratal Account
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In: Journal of African Languages and Linguistics, vol 38, iss 1 (2017)
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Phonological conditions on variable adjective and noun word order in tagalog
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In: Language, vol 93, iss 4 (2017)
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Subordinators and Supradialectal Formulas in the Dialectal Inscriptions from Mainland Greece (Excluding Attica)
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In: Minamimoto, Toru. (2017). Subordinators and Supradialectal Formulas in the Dialectal Inscriptions from Mainland Greece (Excluding Attica). UCLA: Indo-European Studies 0450. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/84x9n3d3 (2017)
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Abstract:
In this dissertation, I investigated the usage of subordinators in Ancient Greek dialectal inscriptions and their interactions with supradialectal formulas, i.e., relatively fixed expressions shared across dialectal borders. Subordinators are grammatical elements and therefore are expected to behave in a systematic manner; supradialectal formulas are expected to provide a “test tube”, revealing how different dialects express the same notion. As the first step, I compiled an up-to-date collection of known attestations of subordinators in the dialects of Mainland Greece. Using this collection, I investigated the interactions of local dialects and the standard language in the contexts of fixed expressions and creative composition. In some cases, the confinement of a subordinator into a fixed expression suggests its inactive status in the dialect, and in contrast, the active status of a subordinator is illustrated by its appearances in supradialectal formulas replacing non-local subordinators. Uses of non-local subordinators often result from the predominance of the standard language, but sometimes from the borrowing of phraseological units as a whole rather than the borrowing of the subordinator alone.
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Keyword:
Ancient languages; Dialect; Epigraphy; Greek; Linguistics; Phraseology; Syntax
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URL: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/84x9n3d3
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8 |
Person as an inflectional category
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In: Linguistic Typology, vol 21, iss 3 (2017)
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Intervention in tough-constructions revisited
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In: The Linguistic Review, vol 34, iss 2 (2017)
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10 |
The unabashed typologist: A Frans Plank Schubertiade: Prefac
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In: Linguistic Typology, vol 21, iss 2017 (2017)
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12 |
Archaisms and Innovations in the Songs of Homer
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In: Lundquist, Jesse. (2017). Archaisms and Innovations in the Songs of Homer. UCLA: Indo-European Studies 0450. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/6ng8d41g (2017)
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Variability in /s/ among transgender speakers: Evidence for a socially grounded account of gender and sibilants
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In: LINGUISTICS, vol 55, iss 5 (2017)
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14 |
Countability distinctions and semantic variation
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In: Natural Language Semantics, vol 25, iss 2 (2017)
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Harmonic Grammar and Harmonic Serialism
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In: PHONOLOGY, vol 34, iss 3 (2017)
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Intersecting constraint families: An argument for harmonic grammar: Supplementary Material
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In: Language, vol 93, iss 3 (2017)
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17 |
Vocabulary and Reading Performances of Redesignated Fluent English Proficient Students
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In: TESOL Quarterly, vol 51, iss 4 (2017)
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18 |
An argument from acquisition: Comparing English metrical stress representations by how learnable they are from child-directed speech
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In: LANGUAGE ACQUISITION, vol 24, iss 4 (2017)
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