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Germanic genitives / edited by Tanja Ackermann, FU Berlin ; Horst J. Simon, FU Berlin ; Christian Zimmer, FU Berlin. — 1 online resource. — (Studies in language companion series). — <URL:http://elib.fa.ru/ebsco/1793256.pdf>.Дата создания записи: 12.12.2017 Тематика: Germanic languages — Congresses. — Case; Germanic languages — Congresses. — Possessives; Grammar, Comparative and general — Congresses. — Morphosyntax; FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY / German Коллекции: EBSCO Разрешенные действия: –
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Оглавление
- Germanic Genitives
- Editorial page
- Germanic Genitives
- Title page
- LCC data
- Table of contents
- Genitives in Germanic
- Contributions to this volume
- Acknowledgements
- References
- A new perspective on the Luxembourgish genitive
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Characterizing the Luxembourgish language and data
- 3. Preliminary remarks
- 4. Genitive constructions in Luxembourgish
- 4.1 Attributes
- 4.2 Genitive complements of verbs and adjectives
- 4.3 Prepositions
- 4.4 Adverbials
- 4.5 Family names
- 4.6 Partitives
- 5. Summary
- Acknowledgements
- Internet sources
- Sources
- References
- Frisian genitives
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The genitive in Old Frisian
- 3. Possessive use of the former genitival endings
- 4. The redistribution of the former strong and weak genitival endings
- 4.1 Gametonyms in West Frisian
- 4.2 Patronyms in Fering-Öömrang
- 5. Reanalysis of prenominal genitives
- 5.1 Genitive compounds in West Frisian
- 5.2 Geographical adjectives and inhabitant names in North Frisian
- 5.3 The genitive of family names in West Frisian
- 6. Recycling of the former genitival endings
- 6.1 The ending -s as a countability marker in Fering-Öömrang
- 6.2 The ending -s in temporal adverbs in West Frisian
- 7. Literary use of the genitive
- 8. Conclusion
- Sources
- References
- On the motivation of genitive‑s omission in Contemporary German
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Which words are affected by ‑s omission in Contemporary German?
- 3. Why are only peripheral nouns affected by ‑s omission?
- 4. The impact of ‑s on the recognition of peripheral nouns
- 5. Morphological integration of loanwords
- 6. Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- Corpora
- Sources
- References
- From genitive suffix to linking element
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Phenomenon and corpora
- 3. Study 1: Nominal constructions in Early New High German – from genitive attribute to compound
- 4. Study 2: Measuring productivity of compounding patterns
- 5. Study 3: Persisting syntactic properties
- 6. Summary and conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- Corpora
- References
- The development of non-paradigmatic linking elements in Faroese and the decline of the genitive case
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The decline of the genitive case in Faroese
- Anchor 58
- 2.2 The functional decline of the synthetic genitive
- 3. Linking elements in Faroese
- 3.1 Formal dissociation from the inflectional endings
- 3.2 The functional dissociation of linking elements: The development of new functions
- 3.3 The development of syllabic conditioning of + ar + and + a +
- 4. Conclusion
- References
- The Genitive Rule and its background
- 1. Genitive and visibility
- 2. DP/NP-internal feature distribution in German
- 2.1 Obscure case forms
- 2.2 Main and secondary feature bearers
- 3. The interaction of visibility and feature distribution
- 3.1 Compulsory and optional substitutive constructions
- 3.2 Overview of the following discussion
- 4. The expected behavior
- Unexpected behavior I
- 5.1 Pronouns with genitive marker -es
- 5.2 Recurring genitive phrases
- 6. Unexpected behavior II
- 6.1 Prestigious prepositions
- 6.2 Proper nouns
- 6.3 Derivations from geographical proper names with suffix -er
- 6.4 Some other constructions
- 7. The Genitive Rule and the tendency to redundancy-free inflection
- 7.1 Loss of the genitive ending of nouns
- 7.2 Determiners: Weak vs. strong endings
- 7.3 The preference against case forms of nouns
- 8. Conlusion
- Acknowledgements
- Sources
- References
- From genitive inflection to possessive marker?
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Morphology: The case declension of personal names
- 2.1 Synchrony
- 2.2 Diachrony
- 2.3 Why are personal names prone to deflexion? – Animacy versus scheme constancy
- 3. (Morpho-)Syntax: “Genitive” constructions with personal names
- 3.1 Where does the -s occur?
- 3.1.1 Grammars
- 3.1.2 Corpus data (DECOW)
- 3.2 Proposed formal analyses for German possessive -s
- 3.1 Where does the -s occur?
- 4. The status of ‑s – genitive inflection or clitic marker?
- 4.1 English possessive ’s constructions
- 4.2 Synchronic and diachronic empirical data of German
- 5. Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Yiddish possessives as a case for genitive case
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The Yiddish case system
- 3. The morphosyntactic status of the Yiddish possessive marker
- 3.1 Prenominal possessor constructions in Fribourg German
- 3.2 The properties of Yiddish prenominal possessors
- 3.2.1 Selectional restrictions
- 3.2.2 Morphological marking
- 3.2.3 Type of placement
- 3.3 Summary and analysis
- 4. Some remarks on the diachrony of Yiddish possessive marking
- 4.1 Prenominal possessors in the Tsenerene
- 4.2 A diachronic scenario
- 4.3 Summary
- 5. Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- Primary sources
- References
- Genitives and proper name compounds in German
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Genitives and compounds: Morphological and syntactic properties
- 2.1 Genitives
- 2.2 Compounds
- 3. Genitives and compounds: Semantic properties
- 4. Semantic overlap between proper name compounds and genitives
- 5. Restrictions on proper name compounding
- 6. Conclusion
- References
- On the role of cases and possession in Germanic
- 1. Introduction – road map
- 2. Structural vs. non-structural cases
- 3. On the history and hierarchy of cases
- 3.1 On the nature of cases in Germanic
- 3.2 Polyfunctionality
- 4. Inflectional morphology and semantic markedness
- 4.1 Inflectional marking
- 4.2 Reflexivity in pronominal systems
- 5. Morphological transparency, emphasis and periphrastic constructions
- 5.1 Morphological marking
- 5.2 The emergence of a new morphological marker in Faroese
- 5.3 More transparency through prepositional phrases
- 6. Genitival and periphrastic constructions, seen from a typological perspective
- 6.1 Typological differences between West and North Germanic
- 6.2 Restrictions within genitive NPs
- 7. Branching and weight in genitival noun phrases
- 7.1 Left branching and group genitives
- 7.2 Right branching and possession
- 8. Conclusions
- 8.1 On the helix in language history („Vom Spirallauf der Sprachgeschichte“)
- 8.2 Overlapping grammatical functions and their consequences
- 8.2.1 Grammatical overspecification and linguistic complexity
- 8.2.2 Grammatical underspecification
- 8.3 Progress in language evolution?
- Acknowledgements
- Primary sources
- References
- Index
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