Article
Publicly Available
Masthead
Published/Copyright:
November 14, 2012
Published Online: 2012-11-14
Published in Print: 2012-11-16
©[2012] by Walter de Gruyter Berlin Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Masthead
- The art of getting: GET verbs in European languages from a synchronic and diachronic point of view: Introduction
- Noncanonical passives revisited: Parameters of nonactive Voice
- The GET constructions of Modern Irish and Irish English: GET-passive and GET-recipient variations
- What you give is what you GET? On reanalysis, semantic extension and functional motivation with the German bekommen-passive construction
- The verb krijgen ‘to get’ as an undative verb
- The BECOME=CAUSE hypothesis and the polysemy of get
- Norwegian få ‘get’: A survey of its uses in present-day Riksmål/Bokmål
- Semantic extension and language contact: The case of Irish faigh ‘get’
- Grammaticalization of Estonian saama ‘to get’
- Language-specific meanings in contrast: A corpus-based contrastive study of Swedish få ‘get’
Articles in the same Issue
- Masthead
- The art of getting: GET verbs in European languages from a synchronic and diachronic point of view: Introduction
- Noncanonical passives revisited: Parameters of nonactive Voice
- The GET constructions of Modern Irish and Irish English: GET-passive and GET-recipient variations
- What you give is what you GET? On reanalysis, semantic extension and functional motivation with the German bekommen-passive construction
- The verb krijgen ‘to get’ as an undative verb
- The BECOME=CAUSE hypothesis and the polysemy of get
- Norwegian få ‘get’: A survey of its uses in present-day Riksmål/Bokmål
- Semantic extension and language contact: The case of Irish faigh ‘get’
- Grammaticalization of Estonian saama ‘to get’
- Language-specific meanings in contrast: A corpus-based contrastive study of Swedish få ‘get’