Your email was sent successfully. Check your inbox.

An error occurred while sending the email. Please try again.

Proceed reservation?

Export
  • 1
    Book
    Book
    London :Milford [u.a.],
    UID:
    almafu_BV011297313
    Format: XXXVI, 497 S.
    Series Statement: University 〈Saint Andrews〉: Saint Andrews University publications 41
    Language: English
    Subjects: German Studies
    RVK:
    Keywords: Altgermanische Sprachen ; Kompositum
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 2
    UID:
    almahu_9947364453202882
    Format: XVI, 601 p. 140 illus. , online resource.
    ISBN: 9783642405853
    Series Statement: Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 8082
    Content: This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 16th International Conference on Text, Speech and Dialogue, TSD 2013, held in Pilsen, Czech Republic, in September 2013. The 65 papers presented together with 5 invited talks were carefully reviewed and selected from 148 submissions. The main topics of this year's conference was corpora, texts and transcription, speech analysis, recognition and synthesis, and their intertwining within NL dialogue systems. The topics also included speech recognition, corpora and language resources, speech and spoken language generation, tagging, classification and parsing of text and speech, semantic processing of text and speech, integrating applications of text and speech processing, as well as automatic dialogue systems, and multimodal techniques and modelling.
    Note: Invited Talks -- Corpora of the Russian Language -- Long, Deep and Wide Artificial Neural Nets for Dealing with Unexpected Noise in Machine Recognition of Speech -- Multilingual Media Monitoring and Text Analysis – Challenges for Highly Inflected Languages -- Spoken Dialogs with Children for Science Learning and Literacy -- Statecharts and SCXML for Dialogue Management -- Conference Papers -- A Comparison of Deep Neural Network Training Methods for Large Vocabulary Speech Recognition -- A Comparison of Two Approaches to Bilingual HMM-based Speech Synthesis -- A Direct Criterion Minimization Based fMLLR via Gradient Descend -- A Machine Learning Based Approach for Vocabulary Selection for Speech Transcription -- A New State-Of-The-Art Czech Named Entity Recognizer -- Algorithms for Dysfluency Detection in Symbolic Sequences Using Suffix Arrays -- Analysis and Combination of Forward and Backward Based Decoders for Improved Speech Transcription -- Annotating Signs of Syntactic Complexity to Support Sentence Simplification -- Application of LSTM Neural Networks in Language Modelling -- Automatic Laughter Detection in Spontaneous Speech Using GMM–SVM Method -- Automatic Machine Translation Evaluation with Part-of-Speech Information -- Automatic Extraction of Polish Language Errors from Text Edition History -- Bilingual Voice Conversion by Weighted Frequency Warping Based on Formant Space -- Building a Hybrid: Chatterbot – Dialog System -- CRF-based Czech Named Entity Recognizer and Consolidation of Czech NER Research -- Comparison and Analysis of Several Phonetic Decoding Approaches -- Concatenation Artifact Detection Trained from Listeners Evaluations -- Configuring TTS Evaluation Method Based on Unit Cost Outlier Detection -- Development and Evaluation of Spoken Dialog Systems with One or Two Agents Through Two Domains -- Distant Supervision Learning of DBPedia Relations -- Downdating Lexicon and Language Model for Automatic Transcription of Czech Historical Spoken Documents -- Dynamic Threshold Selection Method for Multi-label Newspaper Topic Identification -- Efficiency of Multi-tap Text Entry Method on Interactive Television -- English Nominal Compound Detection with Wikipedia-Based Methods -- Evaluating Voice Quality and Speech Synthesis Using Crowdsourcing -- Experiment with Evaluation of Quality of the Synthetic Speech by the GMM Classifier -- Experiments on Reducing Footprint of Unit Selection TTS System -- Expressive Speech Synthesis for Urgent Warning Messages Generation in Romani and Slovak -- Extracting Relations Between Arabic Named Entities -- Foot Detection in Czech Using Pitch Information and HMM -- Improved Hungarian Morphological Disambiguation with Tagger Combination -- Improving Dependency Parsing by Filtering Linguistic Noise -- Improving Speech Recognition by Detecting Foreign Inclusions and Generating Pronunciations -- Intensifying verb prefix patterns in Czech and Russian -- K-component Adaptive Recurrent Neural Network Language Models -- LIUM ASR System for ETAPE French Evaluation Campaign: Experiments on System Combination Using Open-source Recognizers -- Lexical Stress-based Morphological Decomposition and Its Application for Ukrainian Speech Recognition -- Motion Event in Croatian, English, German and Italian Concerning Path Prefixes and Prepositions -- Multi-label Document Classification in Czech -- On Behaviour of PLDA Models in the Task of Speaker Recognition -- On the Quantitative and Qualitative Speech Changes of the Czech Radio Broadcasts News within Years 1969-2005 -- On the Use of Phoneme Lattices in Spoken Language Understanding -- Online Speaker Adaptation of an Acoustic Model Using Face Recognition -- Ontology of Rhetorical Figures for Serbian -- Phoneme Set and Pronouncing Dictionary Creation for Large Vocabulary Continuous Speech Recognition of Vietnamese -- Phonetic Spoken Term Detection in Large Audio Archive Using the WFST Framework -- Ranking Machine Translation Systems via Post-Editing -- Recursive Part-of-Speech Tagging Using Word Structures -- Resolving Ambiguities in Sentence Boundary Detection in Russian Spontaneous Speech -- Revealing Prevailing Semantic Contents of Clusters Generated from Untagged Freely Written Text Documents in Natural Languages -- Robust Methodology for TTS Enhancement Evaluation -- Romanian Syllabication Using Machine Learning -- SVM-Based Detection of Misannotated Words in Read Speech Corpora -- Scratching the Surface of Possible Translations -- Selecting and Weighting N-Grams to Identify 1100 Languages -- Semantic Spaces for Sentiment Analysis -- Semi-automatic Verb Valence Frame Assignment Through VerbNet Classification -- Speaker-specific Pronunciation for Speech Synthesis -- Structuring a Multimedia Tri-dialectal Dictionary -- Stylistic Changes for Temporal Text Classification -- SummEC: A Summarization Engine for Czech -- Text-to-Speech Alignment for Imperfect Transcriptions -- The CNG Corpus of European Portuguese Children’s Speech -- The Joint Optimization of Spectro-Temporal Features and Neural Net Classifiers -- Three Syntactic Formalisms for Data-Driven Dependency Parsing of Croatian -- Topic Models for Comparative Summarization -- Using Low-Cost Annotation to Train a Reliable Czech Shallow Parser -- Verb Subcategorisation Acquisition for Estonian Based on Morphological Information -- Whispered Speech Database: Design, Processing and Application.
    In: Springer eBooks
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9783642405846
    Language: English
    Subjects: Computer Science
    RVK:
    Keywords: Konferenzschrift ; Konferenzschrift ; Konferenzschrift
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
    URL: Cover
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Amsterdam ; : John Benjamins Publishing Company,
    UID:
    almahu_9949088429902882
    Format: 1 online resource (335 pages).
    ISBN: 9789027264473 (e-book)
    Series Statement: Studies in language companion series ; Volume 193
    Note: Introductory overview -- Genitives in Germanic / Christian Zimmer, Horst J. Simon & Tanja Ackermann -- Portraits of lesser studied languages. A new perspective on the Luxembourgish genitive / Caroline Dohmer -- Frisian genitives: From Old Frisian to the modern dialects / Jarich Hoekstra -- Genitive markers and their destinies. On the motivation of genitive-s omission in Contemporary German / Christian Zimmer -- From genitive suffix to linking element: A corpus study on the genesis and productivity of a new compounding pattern in (Early) New High German / Kristin Kopf -- The development of non-paradigmatic linking elements in Faroese and the decline of the genitive case / Hjalmar P. Petersen & Renata Szczepaniak -- "Genitives" in nominal configurations. The Genitive Rule and its background / Peter Gallmann -- From genitive inflection to possessive marker? The development of German possessive -s with personal names / Tanja Ackermann -- Yiddish possessives as a case for genitive case / Kerstin Hoge -- Genitives and their functional competitors. Genitives and proper name compounds in German / Barbara Schlucker -- On the role of cases and possession in Germanic: A typological approach / Kurt Braunm©oller.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Germanic genitives. Amsterdam ; Philadelphia : John Benjamins Publishing Company, c2018 ISBN 9789027200235
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books.
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 4
    Book
    Book
    London : Milford
    UID:
    gbv_145902080
    Format: XXXVI, 497 S
    Series Statement: St. Andrews University Publications 41
    Language: English
    Keywords: Wortbildung ; Grammatik ; Deutsch
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 5
    Book
    Book
    Ann Arbor, Mich. : Univ. Microfilms Internat.
    UID:
    gbv_432969012
    Format: XXXVI, 497 S.
    Edition: London$nMilford [usw.]
    Series Statement: S[ain]t Andrews University publications 41
    Language: Undetermined
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 6
    Book
    Book
    London,
    UID:
    almahu_BV040509474
    Language: English
    Keywords: Altgermanische Sprachen ; Kompositum
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 7
    UID:
    edocfu_9959233794902883
    Format: 1 online resource (vi, 331 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-282-15528-8 , 9786612155284 , 90-272-9316-3
    Series Statement: Linguistik aktuell, v. 97
    Content: This selection of papers presented at the 20th Comparative Germanic Syntax Workshop brings together contributions that address issues in syntactic predication and studies in the nominal system, as well as papers on data from the history of English and German. Showing a strong comparative commitment, the contributions include studies on previously neglected data on case and predicative structures in Icelandic and other Germanic languages, on the (non-)syntactic distinction of predicative vs. argument NP/DPs, on quirky V2 in Afrikaans, the pronominal system, resumptive pronouns with relative clauses in Zurich German, as well as historical papers on word-formation processes, on auxiliary selection in relation to counter factuality, and on the development of VO-OV orders in the history of English. This volume presents a wide range of studies that enrich both the theoretical understanding and the empirical foundation of comparative research on the Germanic languages.
    Note: Selected papers presented at the 20th Comparative Germanic Syntax Workshop held in June, 2005, in Tilburg. , Comparative Studies in Germanic Syntax -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- From Afrikaans to Zurich German -- References -- I. Studies on predication -- The Nom/Acc alternation in Germanic -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The distribution of Nom/Acc across the Germanic languages -- 2.1. Germanic relational case-marking -- 2.2. Non-Burzionian accusatives -- 2.3. The Germanic predicative Nom/Acc variation -- 3. Relational case -- 4. The nature of the predicative Nom/Acc variation -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- Shape conservation, Holmberg's generalization and predication -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Restrictions on object shift as a phonological phenomenon -- 3. Shape conservation as an explanation for object shift -- 4. Particle constructions -- 5. Predication theory -- 6. Shape distortion -- 6.1. DO-IO reorderings -- 6.2. The `inverse Holmberg effect' -- 7. Conclusion -- References -- Quirky verb-second in Afrikaans -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Coordinated predicates in comparative perspective -- 3. The base structure of Afrikaans coordinated predicates -- 3.1. Distribution of subjects -- 3.2. Distribution of adverbs -- 3.3. Distribution of objects -- 3.4. Distribution of separable particles -- 3.5. Summary of distributions -- 4. Coordination and feature bundles -- 5. Deriving the base structure for ILV constructions -- 5.1. Implications of the LCL for coordinated feature bundles -- 5.2. Deriving a simplex initial -- 5.3. Creating and moving a complex initial -- 6. Other types of moved verbal clusters -- 7. Conclusion -- References -- Nominal arguments and nominal predicates -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Bare singular nominals -- 3. Some tests for predicates -- 3.1. Embedding under `consider' -- 3.2. Topicalisation -- 3.3. Pseudoclefting -- 3.4. Nonrestrictive relative clause -- 3.5. Coordination -- 3.6. Summing up the tests. , 4. Definite nominal phrases -- 5. Possessed nominal phrases -- 5.1. Postnominal possessors -- 5.2. Prenominal possessors -- 6. Strong quantifiers, demonstratives, and personal pronouns -- 7. The Pred head -- 8. Conclusion -- References -- II. Studies on the (pro)nominal system -- Pronominal noun phrases, number specifications, and null nouns -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Morphological vs. semantic number -- 3. Pronominal noun phrases exhibit semantic agreement -- 3.1. Morphological dis-agreement: Pronoun(pl) + noun(sg) -- 3.2. Morphological dis-agreement: pronoun(sg) + noun(pl) -- 4. Pronominal noun phrases contain "individualizable'' and concrete nouns -- 5. The proposal -- 5.1. Accounting for morphological dis-agreement -- 5.2. Alternative analyses -- 5.3. Accounting for the semantic properties of Spec,DisP -- 6. Possible values on Num and DP-external "special'' agreement -- 6.1. Semantic number is not feature checking -- 6.2. Ruling out DP-internal semantic dis-agreement -- 6.3. Ruling out DP-external semantic dis-agreement -- 7. Pronouns of other morphological person and null nouns -- 7.1. Some non-canonical cases -- 7.2. The inventory of null nouns -- 8. Further issues -- 8.1. Semantic agreement is not a sufficient condition -- 8.2. Ruling out overgeneration due to DisP -- 9. Conclusion -- References -- Toward a syntactic theory of number neutralisation -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Number neutralisation in Dutch je `you' -- 3. Arguments against the lexicalist approach -- 3.1. A morphological argument -- 3.2. A comparative argument -- 3.3. Theoretical considerations -- 3.4. Diachronic evidence -- 4. Kayne's syntactic theory of number neutralisation -- 5. Number neutralisation in Dutch 3rd person pronouns -- 5.1. Middle Dutch 'hem' -- 5.2. Number neutralisation in Modern Dutch ze -- 5.3. Discourse properties of 'ze'. , 6. An application: The rise of English 'they' -- 7. Conclusions -- References -- Long relativization in Zurich German as resumptive prolepsis -- 1. Introduction: Relativization in Zurich German -- 1.1. General form of restrictive relatives in Zurich German -- 1.2. Distribution of resumptive pronouns: Local relativization -- 1.3. Distribution of resumptive pronouns: Long-distance relativization -- 2. Long relativization as aboutness relatives: Van Riemsdijk (to appear) -- 2.1. Locative relatives and aboutness relatives: Adverbial wo -- 2.2. Long relativization as aboutness relativization -- 2.3. Advantages -- 3. Problems of van Riemsdijk's (to appear) proposal -- 3.1. There seems to be a copy of the external head inside the relative -- 3.2. Reconstruction into the embedded clause -- 3.3. Obligatoriness of the resumptive -- 4. Proposal: Long relativization as resumptive prolepsis -- 4.1. The derivation in the matrix clause: Against a phrasal wo -- 4.2. Reconstruction into an opaque domain? -- 4.3. Movement in the complement CP derives a predicate -- 4.4. The link between the operator in the complement and the proleptic object: ellipsis -- 4.5. Why a resumptive? -- 5. A remaining issue: Locality and reconstruction -- 6. Resumptive prolepsis in Standard German and Dutch -- 7. Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- References -- III. Historical studies -- Auxiliary selection and counterfactuality in the history of English and Germanic -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The first appearances of have with come -- 3. Isolating the counterfactual effect -- 4. Towards an explanation -- 5. Some cross-linguistic notes -- 6. Problems for other theories of auxiliary selection -- 7. Conclusion and open questions -- References -- The loss of residual "head-final'' orders and remnant fronting in Late Middle English -- 1. Introduction -- 2. EPP-satisfaction and pied-piping. , 3. The loss of residual head-final orders in Middle English -- 3.1. Stylistic fronting -- 3.2. Verb (Projection) Raising alternations -- 3.3. Conclusion -- 4. Some consequences -- 4.1. OV orders with modals in 15th-century English -- 4.2. The loss of vP-movement -- 4.3. The reanalysis of the modals in ENE -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- Syntactic sources of word-formation processes -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The development of suffixes in the history of English and German -- 3. Are morphological structures the same as syntactic structures? -- 3.1. Headedness, the X-bar schema and referentiality -- 3.2. Consequences for an analysis of the diachronic data: Loss of structure and loss of referentiality -- 4. Further evidence: The rise of genitive compounds in the history of German and English -- 4.1. German -- 4.2. English -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- Index -- The series Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today. , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 90-272-3361-6
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 8
    UID:
    almafu_9959233794902883
    Format: 1 online resource (vi, 331 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-282-15528-8 , 9786612155284 , 90-272-9316-3
    Series Statement: Linguistik aktuell, v. 97
    Content: This selection of papers presented at the 20th Comparative Germanic Syntax Workshop brings together contributions that address issues in syntactic predication and studies in the nominal system, as well as papers on data from the history of English and German. Showing a strong comparative commitment, the contributions include studies on previously neglected data on case and predicative structures in Icelandic and other Germanic languages, on the (non-)syntactic distinction of predicative vs. argument NP/DPs, on quirky V2 in Afrikaans, the pronominal system, resumptive pronouns with relative clauses in Zurich German, as well as historical papers on word-formation processes, on auxiliary selection in relation to counter factuality, and on the development of VO-OV orders in the history of English. This volume presents a wide range of studies that enrich both the theoretical understanding and the empirical foundation of comparative research on the Germanic languages.
    Note: Selected papers presented at the 20th Comparative Germanic Syntax Workshop held in June, 2005, in Tilburg. , Comparative Studies in Germanic Syntax -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- From Afrikaans to Zurich German -- References -- I. Studies on predication -- The Nom/Acc alternation in Germanic -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The distribution of Nom/Acc across the Germanic languages -- 2.1. Germanic relational case-marking -- 2.2. Non-Burzionian accusatives -- 2.3. The Germanic predicative Nom/Acc variation -- 3. Relational case -- 4. The nature of the predicative Nom/Acc variation -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- Shape conservation, Holmberg's generalization and predication -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Restrictions on object shift as a phonological phenomenon -- 3. Shape conservation as an explanation for object shift -- 4. Particle constructions -- 5. Predication theory -- 6. Shape distortion -- 6.1. DO-IO reorderings -- 6.2. The `inverse Holmberg effect' -- 7. Conclusion -- References -- Quirky verb-second in Afrikaans -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Coordinated predicates in comparative perspective -- 3. The base structure of Afrikaans coordinated predicates -- 3.1. Distribution of subjects -- 3.2. Distribution of adverbs -- 3.3. Distribution of objects -- 3.4. Distribution of separable particles -- 3.5. Summary of distributions -- 4. Coordination and feature bundles -- 5. Deriving the base structure for ILV constructions -- 5.1. Implications of the LCL for coordinated feature bundles -- 5.2. Deriving a simplex initial -- 5.3. Creating and moving a complex initial -- 6. Other types of moved verbal clusters -- 7. Conclusion -- References -- Nominal arguments and nominal predicates -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Bare singular nominals -- 3. Some tests for predicates -- 3.1. Embedding under `consider' -- 3.2. Topicalisation -- 3.3. Pseudoclefting -- 3.4. Nonrestrictive relative clause -- 3.5. Coordination -- 3.6. Summing up the tests. , 4. Definite nominal phrases -- 5. Possessed nominal phrases -- 5.1. Postnominal possessors -- 5.2. Prenominal possessors -- 6. Strong quantifiers, demonstratives, and personal pronouns -- 7. The Pred head -- 8. Conclusion -- References -- II. Studies on the (pro)nominal system -- Pronominal noun phrases, number specifications, and null nouns -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Morphological vs. semantic number -- 3. Pronominal noun phrases exhibit semantic agreement -- 3.1. Morphological dis-agreement: Pronoun(pl) + noun(sg) -- 3.2. Morphological dis-agreement: pronoun(sg) + noun(pl) -- 4. Pronominal noun phrases contain "individualizable'' and concrete nouns -- 5. The proposal -- 5.1. Accounting for morphological dis-agreement -- 5.2. Alternative analyses -- 5.3. Accounting for the semantic properties of Spec,DisP -- 6. Possible values on Num and DP-external "special'' agreement -- 6.1. Semantic number is not feature checking -- 6.2. Ruling out DP-internal semantic dis-agreement -- 6.3. Ruling out DP-external semantic dis-agreement -- 7. Pronouns of other morphological person and null nouns -- 7.1. Some non-canonical cases -- 7.2. The inventory of null nouns -- 8. Further issues -- 8.1. Semantic agreement is not a sufficient condition -- 8.2. Ruling out overgeneration due to DisP -- 9. Conclusion -- References -- Toward a syntactic theory of number neutralisation -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Number neutralisation in Dutch je `you' -- 3. Arguments against the lexicalist approach -- 3.1. A morphological argument -- 3.2. A comparative argument -- 3.3. Theoretical considerations -- 3.4. Diachronic evidence -- 4. Kayne's syntactic theory of number neutralisation -- 5. Number neutralisation in Dutch 3rd person pronouns -- 5.1. Middle Dutch 'hem' -- 5.2. Number neutralisation in Modern Dutch ze -- 5.3. Discourse properties of 'ze'. , 6. An application: The rise of English 'they' -- 7. Conclusions -- References -- Long relativization in Zurich German as resumptive prolepsis -- 1. Introduction: Relativization in Zurich German -- 1.1. General form of restrictive relatives in Zurich German -- 1.2. Distribution of resumptive pronouns: Local relativization -- 1.3. Distribution of resumptive pronouns: Long-distance relativization -- 2. Long relativization as aboutness relatives: Van Riemsdijk (to appear) -- 2.1. Locative relatives and aboutness relatives: Adverbial wo -- 2.2. Long relativization as aboutness relativization -- 2.3. Advantages -- 3. Problems of van Riemsdijk's (to appear) proposal -- 3.1. There seems to be a copy of the external head inside the relative -- 3.2. Reconstruction into the embedded clause -- 3.3. Obligatoriness of the resumptive -- 4. Proposal: Long relativization as resumptive prolepsis -- 4.1. The derivation in the matrix clause: Against a phrasal wo -- 4.2. Reconstruction into an opaque domain? -- 4.3. Movement in the complement CP derives a predicate -- 4.4. The link between the operator in the complement and the proleptic object: ellipsis -- 4.5. Why a resumptive? -- 5. A remaining issue: Locality and reconstruction -- 6. Resumptive prolepsis in Standard German and Dutch -- 7. Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- References -- III. Historical studies -- Auxiliary selection and counterfactuality in the history of English and Germanic -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The first appearances of have with come -- 3. Isolating the counterfactual effect -- 4. Towards an explanation -- 5. Some cross-linguistic notes -- 6. Problems for other theories of auxiliary selection -- 7. Conclusion and open questions -- References -- The loss of residual "head-final'' orders and remnant fronting in Late Middle English -- 1. Introduction -- 2. EPP-satisfaction and pied-piping. , 3. The loss of residual head-final orders in Middle English -- 3.1. Stylistic fronting -- 3.2. Verb (Projection) Raising alternations -- 3.3. Conclusion -- 4. Some consequences -- 4.1. OV orders with modals in 15th-century English -- 4.2. The loss of vP-movement -- 4.3. The reanalysis of the modals in ENE -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- Syntactic sources of word-formation processes -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The development of suffixes in the history of English and German -- 3. Are morphological structures the same as syntactic structures? -- 3.1. Headedness, the X-bar schema and referentiality -- 3.2. Consequences for an analysis of the diachronic data: Loss of structure and loss of referentiality -- 4. Further evidence: The rise of genitive compounds in the history of German and English -- 4.1. German -- 4.2. English -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- Index -- The series Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today. , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 90-272-3361-6
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 9
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Amsterdam, [the Netherlands] ; : John Benjamins Publishing Company,
    UID:
    almafu_9959233887902883
    Format: 1 online resource (135 pages).
    Edition: 1st ed.
    Series Statement: Language Acquisition and Language Disorders, Volume 61
    Note: Intro -- Nominal Compound Acquisition -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- Abbreviations -- Introduction -- 1. Compounding -- 1.1 Aim of the volume -- 1.2 Compounding preferences -- 1.3 Compounding vs. phrasal syntax -- 1.4 Classification of compounds -- 2. Methodology and theoretical approach -- 2.1 Longitudinal study of spontaneous speech -- 2.2 Distinctions between phases -- 2.2.1 Premorphology -- 2.2.2 Protomorphology -- 2.2.3 Core morphology -- 3. Relations between input and output -- 4. Linguistic typology -- 5. Summaries of chapters -- References -- 1. Emergence and early development of German compounds -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Nominal compounding in adult Austrian German -- 3. A brief history of research -- 4. Acquisition data -- 5. Amalgams -- 6. Phrases vs. compounds? -- 7. Emergence of compounding -- 8. Order of emergence of compounds with and without interfixes -- 9. A blind alley development -- 10. Productivity and emergence of compound patterns -- 11. The impact of transparency -- 12. Recursivity -- 13. Discussion and outlook -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 2. Compound nouns in Danish child language -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Compounding in Danish -- 3. Compound nouns in Danish -- 3.1 Endocentric compounds -- 3.2 Exocentric compounds -- 3.3 Coordinative compounds -- 3.4 Morphosemantically opaque compounds -- 4. Data and method -- 5. Results: Compound nouns in Danish CS and CDS -- 6. Summary and further analyses -- 6.1 The first compound contrasts -- 6.2 Morphosemantically opaque compounds -- 6.3 Swapped elements -- 6.4 As substitute for a conventional word -- 6.5 Innovative compound nouns (neologisms) -- 7. CDS versus CS -- 8. Lexical typology -- 9. Concluding remarks -- References -- 3. Acquisition of nominal compounds in Russian -- 1. Introduction -- 1.1 Russian compounding: Main characteristics. , 1.1.1 Formation and usage -- 1.1.2 Semantics, structure and accentual features of compounds -- 1.1.3 Compound 'candidates' for early emergence in adult - child conversation -- 2. The data and method -- 3. Early development of compounds in Russian CS -- 3.1 Emergence of the earliest compounds -- 3.2 Development of compounding -- 3.3 Simplicity and transparency in compound acquisition -- 3.4 Individual features of compound repertoire in CS -- 3.5 Productive use of compounds -- 3.6. Productivity and frequency in compound acquisition -- 3.6.1 Influence of target-language -- 3.6.2 Influence of 'compound input': Quantitative analysis -- 4. Lexical typology -- 5. Conclusions -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 4. Early development of compounds in two French children's corpora -- 1. Introduction -- 2. French compounding -- 3. The data -- 4. Method of analysis -- 5. Results -- 5.1 Emergence of compounding: overall picture -- 5.2 Strict compounds -- 5.3 Multilexical units -- 5.4 Errors -- 6. Lexical typology -- 7. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 5. Compounding in early Greek language acquisition -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Compounding in Standard Modern Greek -- 3. Data -- 4. Compounding in early Greek child speech and child-directed speech -- 5. Discussion and conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 6. The early production of compounds inLithuanian -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The structure of Lithuanian noun compounds -- 3. The data -- 4. The study -- 5. Conclusions -- References -- 7. Acquisition of noun compounds in Estonian -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Overview of noun compounds in Estonian -- 3. Development of noun compounds in Estonian -- 3.1 Data -- 3.2 Emergence of the first compounds -- 3.3 Emergence of longer compounds -- 3.4 Structure and productive patterns of compound nouns used by Estonian children. , 3.5 Productive usage of compounds -- 3.6 Morphosemantic transparency of compounds -- 3.7 Frequency effects (input vs. output) -- 4. Lexical typology -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- 8. Acquisition of compound nouns in Finnish -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Compounding in Finnish -- 2.1 N+N compounds -- 2.2 Other types of noun compounds -- 3. Types of compounds and their frequencies in Finnish CS and CDS -- 4. Compound neologisms in child language -- 5. Lexical typology -- 6. Conclusion -- References -- Anchor 61 -- 9 . The acquisition of compound nouns in North Saami -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Types of nominal compounds in Saami -- 3. The data -- 4. The emergence and early development of compounds in Saami child language -- 4.1 The emergence of compounds -- 4.2 Lexical typology -- 4.3 The non-heads -- 4.4 Contrastive forms of compounds -- 4.5 Recursivity -- 4.6 Neologisms -- 4.7 Semantic transparency of the non-head and head -- 5. Discussion and conclusion -- Anchor 88 -- References -- 10. The emergence of nominal compounds in Turkish -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Compounds in Turkish child-directed speech -- 2.1 Bare compounds (NN and adjN) -- 2.2 Possessive compounds (NN-poss) -- 2.3 Other compounds -- 2.4 Exclusions -- 2.5 Frequency of compounds -- 3. Subject and method -- 4. Results -- 4.1 Proportion of compounds -- 4.2 Emergence of compounds -- 4.2.1 Premorphology period: Bare NN compounds -- 4.2.2 The protomorphology period: NN-poss compounds and adjn compounds -- 4.2.3 Morphology Proper -- 4.3 Productivity in compounds -- 5. Discussion and conclusion -- References -- 11. Compounding in early child speech: Hebrew peer talk 2-8 -- 1. Introduction -- 1.1 Hebrew compounds in child language development -- 1.1.1 Adjacency smixut compounds -- 1.1.2 Compounds based on shel 'of' -- 1.2 Aims and theoretical frameworks of analysis -- 2. Method -- 2.1 Analysis. , 3. Results -- 3.1 General compounding measures -- 3.2 Grammatical compounds -- 3.3 Lexical compounding -- 4. Discussion: From loose to specified relations across childhood -- 4.1 2-2 -- 6 year olds -- 4.2 2 -- 6-3 year olds -- 4.3 3-4 year olds -- 4.4 4-5 year olds -- 4.5 5-6 year olds -- 4.6 7-8 year olds -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- 12. Contrastive lexical typology of German and Greek child speech and child-directed speech -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Frequency of nominal compounds in German and Greek child speech -- Anchor 110 -- 3. Contrastive lexical analysis of German and Greek -- 3.1 Distributional analysis -- 3.2 Qualitative analysis -- Anchor 114 -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 13. Discussion and outlook -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Emergence of compounds and compounding patterns -- 3. Emergence of neologistic compounds -- 4. Typological characteristics of the languages concerned -- 5. Lexical typology and wealth of compounding -- 6. Development of subtypes of compounds -- 6.1 Word classes of compound constituents -- 6.2 Morphotactic transparency -- 6.3 Rise of complexity -- 7. Relations between CDS and CS -- 7.1 Errors -- 7.2 To what extent does CS follow CDS? -- 8. Theoretical and methodological consequences for acquisition studies -- 9. Theoretical consequences for the study of compounds in general -- 10. Outlook -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Index.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 90-272-5324-2
    Additional Edition: ISBN 90-272-6497-X
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 10
    UID:
    edocfu_9959243166602883
    Format: viii, 369 p.
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-282-15635-7 , 9786612156359 , 90-272-9406-2
    Series Statement: Amsterdam studies in the theory and history of linguistic science. Series IV, Current issues in linguistic theory ; v. 270
    Content: The annual Going Romance conference is the major European discussion forum for theoretically relevant research on Romance languages where current ideas about language in general and about Romance languages in particular are tested. Starting with the thirteenth conference held in 1999, volumes with selected papers of the conferences are published under the title Romance Languages and Linguistic Theory, This is the fifth such volume, containing a selection of papers that have been presented at the seventeenth Going Romance conference, held at the Radboud University Nijmegen (The Netherlands) from 20-22 November 2003. The three-day program included a workshop on 'Diachronic Phonology'. The present volume contains a broad range of articles dealing not only with syntax and phonology, but also with morphology, semantics and acquisition of the Romance languages.
    Note: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , ROMANCE LANGUAGES AND LINGUISTIC THEORY 2003 -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- INTRODUCTION -- CONTENTS -- AN INTEGRATED APPROACH TO VARIATION IN OT -- 1. Introduction -- 2. r-deletion in Brazilian Portuguese - An OT Account -- 3. Across-Word Regressive Assimilation in Picard - An OT Account -- 4. Conclusions -- References -- ON FACTS IN THE SYNTAX AND SEMANTICS OF ITALIAN* -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Events, propositions and facts -- 3. Facts and truth -- 3.1 Some preliminary observations on the factive truth-predicate -- 3.2 Deriving the disquotational usage -- 4. Facts and pronominal anaphora -- References -- ON THE STATUS OF STEMS IN MORPHOLOGICAL THEORY -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The Verbal Inflection of Latin -- 3. Stems -- 4. Stems in Latin? -- 4.1 The Perfect -- 4.2 "Past"/"Passive" and "Future Active" Participles -- 4.3 Stems and "Morphology by Itself" -- 5. Conclusions and Further Directions -- References -- ITALIAN [VN] COMPOUND NOUNS -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Theoretical Premises for a Syntactic Analysis -- 2.1 Nominal Compound Types in Italian and the [NØ] Hypothesis -- 2.2 How NØ Enters into the Structure -- 3. The Analysis of VN Compounds -- 3.1 Semantics -- 3.2 Syntax -- 3.3 Morphology -- 4. Previous Analyses on the End Vocalic Segments [a-i-i] -- 4.1 Arguments Against the Imperative Solution -- 4.2 Arguments Against the Present Tense Hypothesis -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- THE DEVELOPMENT OF LIQUIDS FROM LATIN TO CAMPIDANIAN SARDINIAN -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Latin liquids in Campidanian clusters -- 3. Sardinian: a one-liquid system -- 3.1 Phonological patterns -- 3.2 /L/ in the obstruent subset -- 3.3 Summary -- 4. Coda /R/ in Campidanian -- 4.1 Data -- 4.2 Coda requirements -- 4.3 Segment representations -- 4.4 Computing repair strategies -- 5. Conclusions -- References. , CLITIC PLACEMENT AND THE POSITION OF SUBJECTS IN THE HISTORY OF EUROPEAN PORTUGUESE -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The variation between enclisis and proclisis in Classical Portuguese -- 3. The evolution of clitic placement in V3 constructions from Classical to Modern European Portuguese -- 3.1 Enclisis and Proclisis in V3: 16th and 17th centuries -- 3.2 Enclisis and Proclisis in V3 after 1700 -- 4. The dissociation of SVcl and XVcl and the loss of VS -- 5. Concluding Remarks -- References -- SUBJECT INVERSION IN SPANISH RELATIVE CLAUSES -- 1. Introduction -- 1.1 Wh-interrogatives -- 1.2 Focalization -- 2. Prominence, prosodic weight and word order -- 2.1 Prosodic structure -- 2.2 Prosodic weight and intonational prominence -- 3. An OT analysis -- 4. Extensions of the Analysis -- 5. Conclusions -- References -- ATTRITION AND INTERPRETABLE FEATURES -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Interpretability of features and syntactic attrition -- 2.1 Subjects -- 2.2 White & -- Genesee's Criteria -- 3. Syntactic subjects -- 4. The interpretable feature of number -- 4.1 Number -- 5. Results and discussion -- References -- ACCELERATION IN BILINGUAL FIRST LANGUAGE ACQUISITION -- 1. Language influence and language separation in bilingual acquisition -- 2. Nominal arguments and the NP/ DP distinction -- 2.1. Why language influence in the nominal domain is expected -- 3. The acquisition of determiners -- 3.1 The "Romance"- "Germanic" asymmetry in acquisition -- 3.2 The data -- 3.3 Acceleration in the acquisition of determiners in the German of the bilingual children -- 4. Article functions in the early grammar of a bilingual German-French child -- 5. Conclusion and discussion -- References -- "FOCUS VS" -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Focus VS in French -- 2.1 Examples -- 2.2 The interpretation of the postverbal subject -- 2.3 Syntactic properties. , 3. Two analyses for VS in the literature -- 4. The analysis of focus VS -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 The type of verb movement involved in the derivation of focus VS -- 4.3 The position of the subject in focus VS -- 4.4 The position of the verb phrase (TP) in focus VS -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- ASPECTUAL QUANTIZATION AND [±] ACCUSATIVE CASE CHECKING IN ROMANCE -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Displacement and case checking -- 2.1 The Minimalist Program -- 2.2 "Weak" and "strong" case -- 2.3 Absolute small clauses (ASCs) -- 2.4 Subject in-situ Generalization (Alexiadou & -- Anagnostopoulou 2001:216) -- 3. The conflation of sentential and lexical aspect and the theory of case -- 4. The analysis -- 4.1 The trigger for V-movement and case activation -- 4.2 AGREE as a default case -- 4.3 Differential object marking -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- STRATA, YES -- STRUCTURE PRESERVATION, NO. -- 1. Two issues in phonological theory -- 1.1 Stratification -- 1.2 Structure Preservation -- 2. Basic Spanish syllabification -- 2.1 Minimal onset -- 2.2 Onset maximization -- 2.3 Cyclic effects -- 2.4 Cancellation of cyclic effects -- 3. Evidence compatible with a single evaluation -- 4. /s/ aspiration evidence for multiple evaluation -- 5. Onset /i/ evidence for multiple evaluation -- 5.1 Word-bounded consonantalization -- 5.2 Cyclic effects -- 6. Conclusion -- References -- DURATIONAL ASYMMETRIES AND THE THEORY OF QUANTITY -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Durational (a)symmetries in 'VC sequences: Latin and Romance -- 2.1 "Duration rhythm" in Italian 'VC sequences -- 2.2 Quantity in Latin, Italian and Spanish -- 3. Comparative consequences of the 'VC domain beyond Romance -- 3.1 Quantity distribution in Germanic languages -- 3.2 'VC domain durational (a)symmetry in Icelandic -- 3.3 Constraints and enhancement in Italian and Icelandic -- 3.4 Marsican is like Icelandic. , 4. The VC hypothesis: (a)symmetries, rhythm, and the computation of duration -- 4.1 Concrete evidence for the VC hypothesis -- 4.2 Phonological viability and projections of the VC hypothesis -- 4.3 The calculus of temporal distribution in Italian at phonetic interface -- 4.4 Modeling (a)symmetries -- References -- WHAT LENITION AND FORTITION TELL US ABOUT GALLO-ROMANCE -- 1. Introduction -- 2. CVCV and the Coda Mirror -- 2.1 Adjacency vs. positional effects: the fate of Latin obstruents in French -- 2.2 Strong positions enjoy a uniform identity: the Coda Mirror -- 3. The Gallo-Romance trouble with TR clusters: colubra -- 3.1 TR was already ambiguous in Latin -- 3.2 Self-contradictory evidence from the (Gallo-)Romance evolution of Latin TR clusters -- 3.3 Solutions offered in the literature -- 4. C+j sequences in Gallo-Romance -- 5. TR is an affricate: Gallo-Romance epenthesis cam(e)ra > -- chambre -- 5.1 Gallo-Romance epenthesis: well-known facts -- 5.2 Syllabic units do not fall from heaven -- 5.3 Gallo-Romance "epenthesis": strengthening, not a "bad contact" -- 5.4 Parasitic r and metathesis -- 6. Conclusion -- References -- THE LAZY FRENCHMAN'S APPROACH TO THE SUBJUNCTIVE -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The Referential Approach -- 2.1 Reference to Individuals -- 2.2 Reference to Worlds -- 3. The French Subjunctive as a Semantic Default -- 3.1 Subjunctive vs. Imperative -- 3.2 Subjunctive vs. Infinitive -- 3.3 Subjunctive vs. Modally Interpreted Past Tense -- 4. The Indicative -- 4.1 Basic Analysis -- 4.2 Minimal Pairs -- 4.3 Hope vs. Want -- 4.4 Counterfactual reasoning and emotives -- 5. Extension: The German Konjunktiv I as a Reportive Indicative -- References -- VOWEL CENTRALIZATION IN ROMANIAN VERBS OF SLAVIC ORIGIN -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The regular sound change -- 3. Spread of the urî-pattern -- 4. Explanatory attempts. , 4.1 Analogical extension -- 4.2 Metaphony/vowel harmony -- 4.3 Borrowing of the vowel with the verb -- 4.4 Borrowing of trilled or "fortis" /r/ -- 5. Exploitation of existing structures to mark loanwords -- 6. Conclusion -- References -- APPENDIX: Etymologies of 112 verbs in -ri -- ON THE RUMANIAN kt > -- pt SHIFT -- 1. How to describe the phenomenon? -- 1.1 About the substratum -- 1.2 Two possible descriptions -- 1.3 Two possible analyses: melodic influence or weakening. -- 2. Coda weakness in world languages -- 2.1 Coda weakness in the KT> -- PT shift -- 2.2 Coda weakening in Romance languages and in Rumanian -- 3. Melodic hypothesis -- 3.1 Underspecification and unlikely coronal influence -- 3.2 Nandris (1963, 1971): K > -- P before anterior consonant -- 3.3 On final "coda": vocalic arguments in favor of final onset -- 4. From weakness to weakening -- 4.1 Underspecification and unlikely coronal influence -- 4.2 Philological contribution -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- EVIDENCE FOR A CUE-BASED THEORY OF LANGUAGE CHANGE AND LANGUAGE ACQUISITION -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The null object in Brazilian Portuguese -- 3. Factoring the data -- 3.1 Diachronic facts -- 3.2 The acquisition of the null object -- 4. Null as ellipsis -- 5. Final Remarks -- References -- SUBJECT INDEX -- AUTHOR INDEX -- The series Current Issues in Linguistic Theory. , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 90-272-4784-6
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Close ⊗
This website uses cookies and the analysis tool Matomo. Further information can be found on the KOBV privacy pages