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Raising patterns in Old High German
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Ulrike Demske
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Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction 1
- Grammaticalization in a speaker-oriented theory of change 11
- 'Degrammaticalization' versus typology: Reflections on a strained relationship 45
- Cascading parameter changes: Internally-driven change in Middle and Early Modern English 79
- The rise and development of analytic perfects in Italo-Romance 115
- Raising patterns in Old High German 143
- The new passive in Icelandic really is a passive 173
- A mentalist interpretation of grammaticalization theory 221
- Linguistic cycles and Economy Principle: The role of Universal Grammar in language change 245
- Explaining exuberant agreement 265
- From resultatives to anteriors in Ancient Greek: On the role of paradigmaticity in semantic change 285
- Lexical nonsense and morphological sense: On the real importance of 'folk etymology' and related phenomena for historical linguists 307
- The diffusion of systemic changes through the inflectional system: Evidence from person-number inflection in the Nordic languages and German 329
- Left Branch Extraction of nominal modifiers in Old Scandinavian 357
- On incorporation in Athapaskan languages: Aspects of language change 375
- Argument marking from Latin to Modern Romance languages: An illustration of 'combined grammaticalisation processes' 411
- Index 439
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction 1
- Grammaticalization in a speaker-oriented theory of change 11
- 'Degrammaticalization' versus typology: Reflections on a strained relationship 45
- Cascading parameter changes: Internally-driven change in Middle and Early Modern English 79
- The rise and development of analytic perfects in Italo-Romance 115
- Raising patterns in Old High German 143
- The new passive in Icelandic really is a passive 173
- A mentalist interpretation of grammaticalization theory 221
- Linguistic cycles and Economy Principle: The role of Universal Grammar in language change 245
- Explaining exuberant agreement 265
- From resultatives to anteriors in Ancient Greek: On the role of paradigmaticity in semantic change 285
- Lexical nonsense and morphological sense: On the real importance of 'folk etymology' and related phenomena for historical linguists 307
- The diffusion of systemic changes through the inflectional system: Evidence from person-number inflection in the Nordic languages and German 329
- Left Branch Extraction of nominal modifiers in Old Scandinavian 357
- On incorporation in Athapaskan languages: Aspects of language change 375
- Argument marking from Latin to Modern Romance languages: An illustration of 'combined grammaticalisation processes' 411
- Index 439