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1
Negation and presupposition
In: The Oxford handbook of negation (2020), S. 369-388
Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft
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2
Noun incorporation and resultative verb compounding in Mandarin Chinese
BASE
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3
Presupposition
In: Semantics - interfaces (Berlin, 2019), p. 494-528
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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4
Clefts: Quite the contrary!
In: Sinn und Bedeutung; Bd. 21 Nr. 1 (2018): Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung 21; 335-346 ; Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung; Vol 21 No 1 (2018): Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung 21; 335-346 ; 2629-6055 (2019)
BASE
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5
Analyzing group behavior from language use with natural language processing and experimental methods : three applications in political science and sociology
BASE
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6
This machine kills fascists : detecting propaganda with formal models of mass discourse structure (and other ideas)
BASE
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7
Symposium & Panel Discussion: Data Citation and Attribution for Reproducible Research in Linguistics
BASE
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8
Universal quantification in the nominal domain in American Sign Language
BASE
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9
Scope, scalarity, and polarity in aspectual marking : the case of English 'until' and Spanish 'hasta'
BASE
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10
Sluicing and stripping in Korean : a non-ellipsis, anaphoric analysis
Kim, Jungsoo. - 2017
BASE
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11
An investigation of projection and temporal reference in Kaqchikel
BASE
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12
Grammar and information structure of Kakataibo
BASE
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13
Reproducible Research in Linguistics: A Position Statement on Data Citation and Attribution in Our Field
In: Linguistics, 2017. Berlin, Germany: Walter de Gruyter (2017)
BASE
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14
Question-based Models of Information Structure
In: The Oxford handbook of information structure (2016), S. 86-107
Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft
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15
"Cause" and affect : evaluative and emotive parameters of meaning among the periphrastic causative verb in English
Abstract: This dissertation investigates the so-called periphrastic causative verbs in English – verbs such as cause, make, have, force, and let – and distinguishes them with respect to their selectional behavior and inferential properties. I suggest that these verbs are primarily differentiated in terms of the evaluative and affective dispositions of participants in the speech act and the caused eventuality. The empirical basis for this claim incorporates corpora as well as experimental elicitation and judgment tasks. Based on these findings, it is proposed that the selection of periphrastic causative verb in the expression of a directive causative event is governed by the evaluative stance of the patient of the causative verb. I argue that the English verb cause in particular is less general than has previously been assumed, that it has at least two different senses, and that its primary sense is restricted to cases of negative speaker sentiment. ; Linguistics
Keyword: Causation; English; Lexical semantics; Periphrastic causative verbs; Semantics; Syntax
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2152/46919
https://doi.org/10.15781/T2Q52FJ8G
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16
Experimental perspectives on presuppositions
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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17
Definiteness and determinacy
Beaver, David; Coppock, Elizabeth. - : SPRINGER, 2015
BASE
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18
An intention-based account of accomplishments in Korean
Lee, Juwon. - 2015
BASE
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19
Imitation of words and actions across cultures
Klinger, Jörn. - 2015
BASE
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20
Text-based document geolocation and its application to the digital humanities
BASE
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