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Coreference in the Popolocan languages
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Annette Veerman-Leichsenring
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Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Preface xi
- How far has far from become grammaticalized? 1
- Recent advances in the reconstruction of the Proto-Munda verb 13
- Multivariable reanalysis and phonological split 31
- Are old English conjunct clauses really verb-final? 49
- Alternation according to person in Italo-Romance 63
- On ablaut and aspect in the history of Aramaic 75
- Language change and the phonological lexicon of Korean 89
- Animals and vegetables, Uto-Aztecan noun derivation, semantic classification, and cultural history 105
- Gradience and linguistic change 119
- Distinctive vowel length in Old French 145
- Remains of a submerged continent 157
- Rapid change among expletive polarity items 175
- The conversational factor in language change 187
- On the origin of the Portuguese inflected infinitive 207
- Innovation of the indirect reflexive in Old French 223
- Lexical forces shaping the evolution of grammar 241
- Why “me” and “thee”? 253
- The English s -genitive 277
- Default inheritance hierarchies and the evolution of inflectional classes 293
- On the eve of a new paradigm 309
- Modeling koineization 325
- Coreference in the Popolocan languages 337
- Atlantis Semitica 351
- Index of languages and language families 371
- Index of names 377
- Index of subjects 385
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Preface xi
- How far has far from become grammaticalized? 1
- Recent advances in the reconstruction of the Proto-Munda verb 13
- Multivariable reanalysis and phonological split 31
- Are old English conjunct clauses really verb-final? 49
- Alternation according to person in Italo-Romance 63
- On ablaut and aspect in the history of Aramaic 75
- Language change and the phonological lexicon of Korean 89
- Animals and vegetables, Uto-Aztecan noun derivation, semantic classification, and cultural history 105
- Gradience and linguistic change 119
- Distinctive vowel length in Old French 145
- Remains of a submerged continent 157
- Rapid change among expletive polarity items 175
- The conversational factor in language change 187
- On the origin of the Portuguese inflected infinitive 207
- Innovation of the indirect reflexive in Old French 223
- Lexical forces shaping the evolution of grammar 241
- Why “me” and “thee”? 253
- The English s -genitive 277
- Default inheritance hierarchies and the evolution of inflectional classes 293
- On the eve of a new paradigm 309
- Modeling koineization 325
- Coreference in the Popolocan languages 337
- Atlantis Semitica 351
- Index of languages and language families 371
- Index of names 377
- Index of subjects 385