Article
Publicly Available
Frontmatter
Published/Copyright:
May 11, 2019
Published Online: 2019-05-11
Published in Print: 2019-05-10
© 2019 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Articles
- Universality and language-dependency of tense and aspect: Performatives from a crosslinguistic perspective
- Elevation as a category of grammar: Sanzhi Dargwa and beyond
- Obituaries
- Obituary: Gilbert Lazard (1920–2018)
- Obituary: Hansjakob Seiler (1920–2018)
- Target Paper and Discussion
- Target Paper
- Reported speech forms a dedicated syntactic domain
- Commentaries
- Reported Speech and viewpoint hierarchy
- Reported speech as a pivotal human phenomenon: Commentary on Spronck and Nikitina
- What is syntactic about reported speech/discourse?
- Reported speech as enactment
- On the exceptionality of reported speech
- Reported speech as a dedicated grammatical domain – and why defenestration should not be thrown out the window
- Delimiting reported discourse: Cross-modal criteria
- Quotations form a recursive discourse
- Response to Spronck and Nikitina “Reported speech forms a dedicated syntactic domain”
- Response
- M and R as elements of a syntactic unit: Where would the relation between M and R come from, if not from syntax?
- Corrigendum
- Corrigendum to: Grammaticalization of nouns meaning “head” into reflexive markers: A cross-linguistic study
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Articles
- Universality and language-dependency of tense and aspect: Performatives from a crosslinguistic perspective
- Elevation as a category of grammar: Sanzhi Dargwa and beyond
- Obituaries
- Obituary: Gilbert Lazard (1920–2018)
- Obituary: Hansjakob Seiler (1920–2018)
- Target Paper and Discussion
- Target Paper
- Reported speech forms a dedicated syntactic domain
- Commentaries
- Reported Speech and viewpoint hierarchy
- Reported speech as a pivotal human phenomenon: Commentary on Spronck and Nikitina
- What is syntactic about reported speech/discourse?
- Reported speech as enactment
- On the exceptionality of reported speech
- Reported speech as a dedicated grammatical domain – and why defenestration should not be thrown out the window
- Delimiting reported discourse: Cross-modal criteria
- Quotations form a recursive discourse
- Response to Spronck and Nikitina “Reported speech forms a dedicated syntactic domain”
- Response
- M and R as elements of a syntactic unit: Where would the relation between M and R come from, if not from syntax?
- Corrigendum
- Corrigendum to: Grammaticalization of nouns meaning “head” into reflexive markers: A cross-linguistic study