Home Linguistics & Semiotics An analysis of the rise of SOV patterns in dutch
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An analysis of the rise of SOV patterns in dutch

  • Marinel Gerritsen
View more publications by John Benjamins Publishing Company
© 1980 John Benjamins Publishing Company

© 1980 John Benjamins Publishing Company

Chapters in this book

  1. Prelim pages i
  2. Acknowledgments v
  3. Table of contents vii
  4. Preface 1
  5. Typology as instigator and regulator of linguistic change 7
  6. Explaining universals and their exceptions 17
  7. Continuity of transmission and genetic relationship 27
  8. Chance cognition 37
  9. Redundancy as explanation in historical linguistics 47
  10. The structure of meaning in semiotic perspective 53
  11. Pragmatic and sociolinguitsic bias in semantic change 61
  12. The marking of definiteness 75
  13. A functional approach to syntactic reconstruction 87
  14. Implications of pre-complementizers with hittite š ak-/šek- ‘know’ 97
  15. On word order in irish 107
  16. Marked and unmarked word order in old norse 115
  17. An analysis of the rise of SOV patterns in dutch 123
  18. Developments in the dutch left-dislocation structures and the verb-second constraint 137
  19. from passive too active in kurdish via the ergative construction 151
  20. On the loss of a rule of syntax 165
  21. The development of accusative-infinitive constructions 175
  22. Syntactic diffusion 183
  23. infinitival complements to verbs of motion in ontarian and quebec french 193
  24. Verb compounds in greek 199
  25. The role of perception in restructuring and relexicalization 211
  26. the evolution of clitics 221
  27. Circumfixes and typological change 233
  28. On the decline of declensional systems 243
  29. Conditions on object marking 253
  30. Reduction of case markers in Lithuanian 259
  31. Analogy and inflectional affix replacement 273
  32. Russian conjugation 285
  33. Sound change and child language 303
  34. The fluctuating intensity of a ‘sound law’ 321
  35. Linguistic reasons for phonetic archaisms in romance 331
  36. Early intervocalic voicing in tuscan 339
  37. The transition problem 349
  38. Lexical alternation and the history of english 355
  39. Pragmatic features and phonological change 363
  40. Tonal accents in basque and greek 371
  41. Acquisition and development of “gastarbeiterdeutsch” by migrant workers and their children in germany 381
  42. Pidginization and foreigner talk 397
  43. Concluding statement 409
  44. Index of names 419
  45. Index of languages 429
  46. Index of subject matter 433
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