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Hits 521 – 530 of 530

521
MPI für evolutionäre Anthropologie and Universität Leipzig
In: http://email.eva.mpg.de/~haspelmt/Replication.pdf
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522
Constructions 2/2004 (www.constructions-online.de, urn:nbn:de:0009-4-359, ISSN 1860-2010) Explaining the Ditransitive Person-Role Constraint: A usage-based approach1
In: http://elanguage.net/journals/constructions/article/download/3073/3052/
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523
Descriptive scales versus comparative scales
In: http://www.uni-leipzig.de/~asw/lab/lab86/LAB86_Haspelmath.pdf
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524
consequences for language description
In: http://email.eva.mpg.de/~haspelmt/Preestablished.pdf
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525
AM IN
In: http://wwwstaff.eva.mpg.de/~haspelmt/2004dir.pdf
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526
2008a). Creating economical morphosyntactic patterns in language change
In: http://wwwstaff.eva.mpg.de/~haspelmt/CreatingEconomy.pdf
Abstract: My starting point in this contribution is the observation that apparently the great majority of universal morphosyntactic asymmetries are economically motivated and thus exemplify the slogan "grammars code best what speakers do most " (Du Bois 1985:363). By morphosyntactic asymmetries I refer to coding differences that do not express a meaning difference, e.g. the contrast between the book and (*the) my book (where the definite article the is impossible although from the meaning it would be expected to occur). In §3-5 I will provide a substantial number of examples of economically motivated asymmetries. On the basis of these, I hypothesize that the pattern is even more general and that in fact the strong claim in (1) is correct. (1) All universal morphosyntactic asymmetries can be explained on the basis of frequency asymmetries, i.e. they all show economic motivation: More frequent patterns are coded with less material. In a second step, I want to examine the ways in which the economic motivation is implemented in languages through diachronic change.
URL: http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.462.4382
http://wwwstaff.eva.mpg.de/~haspelmt/CreatingEconomy.pdf
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527
Content Preface V
In: http://orbi.ulg.ac.be/bitstream/2268/179001/1/Winand%20EALT.pdf
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528Diversity Linguistics Comment. Language structures throughout the world
https://dlc.hypotheses.org/
Topic: Grammar research; History of language; Language typology
Source type: Blogs / Forums
Access: free access
529Language Science Press
https://langsci-press.org/
Topic: Grammar research; Language typology; Syntax
Source type: Blogs / Forums; Repositories
Access: free access
530Leipzig Glossing Rules
https://www.eva.mpg.de/lingua/resources/glossing-rules.php
Topic: Morphology
Access: free access

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