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21
Oblique subjects : a common Germanic inheritance
In: Language. - Washington, DC : Linguistic Society of America 81 (2005) 4, 824-881
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22
Case and control constructions in German, Faroese and Icelandic : or how to evaluate marginally-acceptable data?
In: Working papers in Scandinavian syntax. - Lund : Dep. (2005) 75, 1-36
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23
"Laura A. Michaelis and Josef Ruppenhofer. Beyond Alternations: A Constructional Model of the German Applicative Pattern. Stanford: CSLI Publications 2001" [Rezension]
In: Studies in language <Amsterdam>. - Amsterdam : Benjamins 27 (2003) 3, 663-671
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24
The change that never happened : the story of oblique subjects
In: Journal of linguistics. - London [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press 39 (2003) 3, 439-472
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25
Structures of focus and grammatical relations
Järventausta, Marja (Mitarb.); Heltoft, Lars (Mitarb.); Jóhanna Barðdal (Mitarb.). - Tübingen : Niemeyer, 2003
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UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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26
Oblique subjects : a germanic inheritance!
In: Working papers in Scandinavian syntax. - Lund : Dep. (2003) 71, 145-202
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27
'Oblique subjects' in Icelandic and German
In: Working papers in Scandinavian syntax. - Lund : Dep. (2002) 70, 61-99
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28
The perplexity of dat-nom verbs in Icelandic
In: Nordic journal of linguistics. - Cambridge : Univ. Press 24 (2001) 1, 47-70
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29
The evolution of oblique subjects in Scandinavian
In: Working papers in Scandinavian syntax. - Lund : Dep. (2001) 67, 57-83
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30
Case assignment of nonce verbs in Icelandic
In: Suomen Kielitieteellinen Yhdistys. SKY journal of linguistics. - Helsinki : Suomen Kielitieteellinen Yhdistys 13 (2000), 7-28
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31
Lexical vs. Structural Case: A False Dichotomy
In: http://org.uib.no/iecastp/barddal/Lexical.vs.Structural.Case.Revised.pdf
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32
The Development of Case in Germanic
In: http://org.uib.no/iecastp/IECASTP/Case-Germanic2.pdf
Abstract: In this article five existing explanations for the loss of case morphology in the Germanic languages are examined. These are (1) phonological erosion, (2) a change from synthetic to analytic, (3) a change from free to fixed word order, (4) the development of the definite article, and (5) a change from lexical to structural case. All five explanations are rejected in favor of (6) a usage-based constructional approach where the breakdown of the case system is expected on the basis of the fact that the argument structure constructions are partially synonymous. Hence, it is predicted that the case and argument structure constructions will either merge, with subsequent loss of case distinctions and case morphology, or that high type frequency constructions will attract new verbs and verbs from low type frequency constructions, gradually causing them to fall into disuse. English, Mainland Scandinavian and Dutch have taken the former path, while German, Icelandic and Faroese have developed along the latter.
URL: http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.472.1883
http://org.uib.no/iecastp/IECASTP/Case-Germanic2.pdf
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33
1 The Rise and Fall of Anticausative Constructions in Indo-European: The context of Latin and Germanic*
In: http://org.uib.no/iecastp/barddal/Anticausatives_Cennamo-Eythorsson_Barddal.pdf
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