Periphrasis and inflexion in diachrony: a view from romance
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
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Oxford, United Kingdom ; New York, NY
Oxford University Press
[2022]
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Schriftenreihe: | Oxford studies in diachronic and historical linguistics
48 |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | xxiv, 485 Seiten Diagramme, Karte 24 cm |
ISBN: | 9780198870807 |
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653 | 0 | |a Historical linguistics | |
653 | 0 | |a Grammar, Comparative and general / Inflection | |
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adam_text | Contents Series preface List offigures and maps List of tables Abbreviations and typographic conventions List of contributors xiii xiv xv xix xxv Introduction: Maiden, morphology, and more Adam Ledgeway, John Charles Smith, and Nigel Vincent 1 PART I. THE STATUS OF PERIPHRASIS AND INFLEXION 1. Periphrasis and inflexion: Lessons from Romance Adam Ledgeway and Nigel Vincent 1.1 Introduction 1.2 Theoretical issues 1.2.1 Analysis vs periphrasis 1.2.1.1 Lexical theories 1.2.1.2 Inferential theories 1.2.2 Formal issues in modelling periphrases 1.2.2.1 Intersectivity 1.2.2.2 Non-compositionality 1.2.2.3 Distributed exponence 1.2.2.4 Compound periphrases 1.2.2.5 Gradience 1.2.3 Paradigmaticity 1.3 Diachrony 1.3.1 Grammaticalization and directionality 1.3.2 Compositionality and univerbation 1.3.3 Attestation and reconstruction 1.3.4 Language contact 1.4 Conclusions 2. The boundaries of inflexion and periphrasis John Charles Smith 2.1 Introduction 2.2 The boundaries of inflexion 2.2.1 Preliminary issues 2.2.2 Case study 1: gender 11 11 12 12 15 18 21 21 27 31 32 34 37 42 42 51 54 56 59 61 61 62 62 66
viii CONTENTS 2.2.3 Case study 2: number 2.2.4 Case study 3: vocatives 2.3 The dividing line between inflexion and periphrasis 2.4 The boundaries of periphrasis 2.4.1 Introduction 2.4.2 Intersectivity 2.4.3 Range of forms 2.4.4 Distributed exponence 2.4.5 Contiguity 2.4.6 Non-compositionality 2.4.7 Fuzziness 2.4.8 Structural and sociolingüístic variables 2.4.9 Grammaticalization 2.4.10 Intersectivity as a variable 2.5 Conclusion 67 68 71 73 73 75 79 80 81 83 83 84 87 88 90 PARTII. PERIPHRASIS 3. Layering and divergence in Romance periphrases Nigel Vincent and Max W Wheeler 3.1 Introduction 3.2 Forms of habere ‘have’ 3.3 Forms of the go verb 3.4 Reinforcement of the lexical verb 3.5 Loss of inflexion 3.6 Conclusion 4. The Go-future and GO-past periphrases in Gallo-Romance: A comparative investigation Sandra Paoli and Sam Wolfe 4.1 Introduction 4.2 The GO-fUture in French 4.2.1 From Latin to old French 4.2.2 Middle to modem French 4.2.3 Contemporary developments 4.3 Old Occitan 4.4 Discussion 4.5 Concluding remarks 5. The TORNARE-periphrasis in Italo-Romance: Grammaticalization ‘again’! Mair Parry 5.1 Introduction 5.1.1 Grammaticalization 5.2 Italo-Romance verbal periphrases with tornare 93 93 96 108 118 120 121 123 123 126 126 129 131 132 137 144 145 145 145 146
CONTENTS 5.2.1 Italo-Romance data (nineteenth-twentieth centuries) 5.2.1.1 Infinitival periphrases 5.2.1.2 Paratactic or serial periphrases 5.3 The grammaticalization of tornare 5.3.1 Pragmatic and semantic extension, leading to desemanticization 5.3.2 Decategorialization 5.3.3 Cliticization and erosion? 5.4 Conclusion 6. Periphrases and irregular paradigms in Italo-Romance Silvio Cruschina 6.1 Introduction 6.2 Motion and progressive double inflexion constructions 6.3 The N-pattern as a periphrastic morphome 6.4 The Sicilian modal periphrasis 6.5 Conclusions ІХ 148 148 154 155 160 162 166 167 169 169 171 177 183 187 PART III. AUXILIATION 7. Auxiliary selection in Italo-Romance and inflexional classes Xavier Bach and Pavel Štichauer 7.1 Introduction 7.2 Auxiliary selection and inflexional classes 7.2.1 Content paradigm, form paradigm, and realizations 7.2.2 Segregated inflexional classes and compound tenses 7.3 Mixed perfective auxiliation systems in Italo-Romance 7.4 Mixed systems in reflexives and heteroclisis 7.4.1 Reflexives with the BBH-BBH pattern 7.4.2 Heteroclisis with default marking 7.4.3 Heteroclisis by overabundance 7.4.4 Problematic cases of heteroclisis 7.5 Conclusions 7.5.1 Theoretical problems 7.5.2 Diachronic considerations 8. The morphological nature of person-driven auxiliation: Evidence from shape conditions Michele Loporcaro 8.1 Introduction 8.2 Perfective auxiliation: syntax vs morphology 8.3 Perfective auxiliation depending on the phonology in three dialects of Apulia 8.4 A shape condition on the distribution of ‘hasTis’ 193 193 194 195 197 199 202 203
204 206 208 210 210 211 213 213 214 219 229
X CONTENTS 8.5 From complementary distribution via overabundance to heteroclisis and suppletion 8.6 The limits of morphology 8.7 Conclusion 230 233 236 PART IV. ANALYSIS VS SYNTHESIS 9. The loss of analyticky in the history of Romanian verbal morphology Adina Dragomirescu, Alexandru Nicolae, and Rodica Zafiu 9.1 Introduction 9.2 Periphrastic forms in old Romanian 9.2.1 Periphrases with the lexical verb in the infinitive 9.2.2 Periphrases with the lexical verb in the past participle 9.2.3 Periphrases with the lexical verb in the gerund/present participle 9.3 Analytic forms in modern Romanian 9.4 Analytic forms in (Daco-)Romanian dialectal varieties 9.4.1 Periphrases with the lexical verb in the infinitive 9.4.2 Periphrases with the lexical verb in the past participle forms 9.4.3 Periphrases with the lexical verb in the gerund/present participle 9.5 An account of the partial loss of analyticky in Romanian verbal morphology 9.5.1 Demise of a subset of periphrastic forms 9.5.2 Diachronically stable analytic formations 9.5.3 The relevance of analytic formations which were preserved dialectally 9.6 Conclusions: the loss of analyticky in awider perspective 10. The relation between inflexional and analytic marking of obliques in Romanian Gabriela Pană Dindelegan and Oana Uţă Bărbulescu 10.1 Introduction: marking of oblique functions in modern standard Romanian 10.2 Old Romanian 10.2.1 Distribution of inflexional and analytic markers: an overview 10.2.2 Analytic markers: distribution andcompetition 10.2.3 Mixed structures 10.2.4 Quantifiers 10.2.4.1 Homogeneous constructions vs
heterogeneous constructions 10.2.4.2 Mixed constructions 241 241 243 243 246 252 255 258 258 259 261 262 262 268 269 270 272 272 276 276 279 286 287 290 293
CONTENTS 10.3 Modern Romanian 10.4 Conclusion 11. A diachronic perspective on polymorphism, overabundance, and polyfunctionalism Rosanna Sornicola 11.1 Polymorphism and polyfunctionalism 11.2 Polymorphism and overabundance: on the history of the terms 11.2.1 Overabundance 11.3 On representing the relations between form and function 11.3.1 The relation between form and function 11.3.2 Polymorphism and free variation 11.3.3 Suppletion and syncretism 11.3.4 Polymorphism and polyfunctionalism: paradigmatic and syntagmatic relations 11.3.5 Polymorphism and polyfunctionalism in diachrony 11.4 Polymorphism and polyfunctionalism in late-medieval documents from Italy 11.5 Inflexional systems, polyfunctionalism, and polymorphism 11.6 Influence of phonetic factors 11.7 Atrophization 11.8 Overextension of the stem 11.9 Overextension of inflexion 11.10 Preservation of morphological properties of class III nouns 11.11 Differentiation and hypodifferentiation of paradigm cells 11.12 Interchangeability of forms and merging of paradigm cells 11.13 Syntactic factors 11.14 Hypercharacterization of grammatical relations 11.15 Polyfunctionalism of number and syntactic function 11.16 Towards a diachronic model of polymorphism and polyfUnctionalism ХІ 294 300 305 305 308 310 311 311 312 314 316 317 318 319 322 322 323 323 324 325 328 329 330 330 331 PART V. INFLEXION AND ITS INTERFACES 12. Thematic and lexico-aspectual constraints on V-S agreement: Evidence from northern Italo-Romance Delia Bentley and Michela Cennamo 12.1 Introduction 12.2 Theoretical preliminaries: lexico-aspectual structure and
thematic roles 12.3 The case of Emilian-Romagnol 12.3.1 Our survey 12.3.2 Cross-dialectal variation 12.3.2.1 Agreement variation with [-state] verbs 12.3.2.2 Agreement variation with [+state] verbs 12.3.2.3 Qualitative analysis: summary 335 335 338 340 340 341 342 349 355
xii CONTENTS 12.3.3 Quantitative analysis 12.4 Theoretical considerations and conclusions 13. Conditioned epenthesis in Romance Mark Aronoffand Խրէ Repetti 13.1 Introduction 13.1.1 Intrusive vowels 13.1.2 Phonological epenthesis 13.2 Case studies in Romance languages 13.2.1 Brazilian Portuguese 13.2.2 San Marino 13.2.3 Paduan 13.2.4 Italian 13.2.5 Catalan varieties 13.3 Accounts of the phenomena 13.3.1 Allomorphic solutions 13.3.2 Epenthesis 13.3.3 Interim conclusion: morphologically conditioned epenthetic segment quality 13.4 Other types of insertion 13.4.1 Catalan stem extenders 13.4.2 Italian isc 13.4.3 Spanish antesuffixes 13.5 Findings 14. Koinéization and language contact: The social causes of morphological change in and with Portuguese Tom Finbow and Paul O’Neill 14.1 Introduction 14.2 Koinéization in Romance 14.3 Koinéization in the history of Portuguese 14.3.1 Development of second-person plural pronominal and verbal forms in European Portuguese 14.3.2 Second-person singular non-deferential address in unplanned discourse of two Brazilian Portuguese varieties 14.4 Brazilian Portuguese as morphosyntactic model for indigenous languages 14.4.1 Old Tupi and Portuguese 14.4.1.1 Demonstratives and pronouns 14.4.1.2 Portuguese influence on Yegatú verb typology 14.4.1.3 Grammaticalization of ram 14.4.1.4 Grammaticalization of su ‘go’ 14.5 Conclusion References and bibliographical abbreviations Index 356 360 362 362 363 364 365 365 366 368 369 370 371 371 372 373 376 376 377 378 379 381 381 381 384 384 390 394 395 397 398 404 406 411 413 467
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adam_txt |
Contents Series preface List offigures and maps List of tables Abbreviations and typographic conventions List of contributors xiii xiv xv xix xxv Introduction: Maiden, morphology, and more Adam Ledgeway, John Charles Smith, and Nigel Vincent 1 PART I. THE STATUS OF PERIPHRASIS AND INFLEXION 1. Periphrasis and inflexion: Lessons from Romance Adam Ledgeway and Nigel Vincent 1.1 Introduction 1.2 Theoretical issues 1.2.1 Analysis vs periphrasis 1.2.1.1 Lexical theories 1.2.1.2 Inferential theories 1.2.2 Formal issues in modelling periphrases 1.2.2.1 Intersectivity 1.2.2.2 Non-compositionality 1.2.2.3 Distributed exponence 1.2.2.4 Compound periphrases 1.2.2.5 Gradience 1.2.3 Paradigmaticity 1.3 Diachrony 1.3.1 Grammaticalization and directionality 1.3.2 Compositionality and univerbation 1.3.3 Attestation and reconstruction 1.3.4 Language contact 1.4 Conclusions 2. The boundaries of inflexion and periphrasis John Charles Smith 2.1 Introduction 2.2 The boundaries of inflexion 2.2.1 Preliminary issues 2.2.2 Case study 1: gender 11 11 12 12 15 18 21 21 27 31 32 34 37 42 42 51 54 56 59 61 61 62 62 66
viii CONTENTS 2.2.3 Case study 2: number 2.2.4 Case study 3: vocatives 2.3 The dividing line between inflexion and periphrasis 2.4 The boundaries of periphrasis 2.4.1 Introduction 2.4.2 Intersectivity 2.4.3 Range of forms 2.4.4 Distributed exponence 2.4.5 Contiguity 2.4.6 Non-compositionality 2.4.7 Fuzziness 2.4.8 Structural and sociolingüístic variables 2.4.9 Grammaticalization 2.4.10 Intersectivity as a variable 2.5 Conclusion 67 68 71 73 73 75 79 80 81 83 83 84 87 88 90 PARTII. PERIPHRASIS 3. Layering and divergence in Romance periphrases Nigel Vincent and Max W Wheeler 3.1 Introduction 3.2 Forms of habere ‘have’ 3.3 Forms of the go verb 3.4 Reinforcement of the lexical verb 3.5 Loss of inflexion 3.6 Conclusion 4. The Go-future and GO-past periphrases in Gallo-Romance: A comparative investigation Sandra Paoli and Sam Wolfe 4.1 Introduction 4.2 The GO-fUture in French 4.2.1 From Latin to old French 4.2.2 Middle to modem French 4.2.3 Contemporary developments 4.3 Old Occitan 4.4 Discussion 4.5 Concluding remarks 5. The TORNARE-periphrasis in Italo-Romance: Grammaticalization ‘again’! Mair Parry 5.1 Introduction 5.1.1 Grammaticalization 5.2 Italo-Romance verbal periphrases with tornare 93 93 96 108 118 120 121 123 123 126 126 129 131 132 137 144 145 145 145 146
CONTENTS 5.2.1 Italo-Romance data (nineteenth-twentieth centuries) 5.2.1.1 Infinitival periphrases 5.2.1.2 Paratactic or serial periphrases 5.3 The grammaticalization of tornare 5.3.1 Pragmatic and semantic extension, leading to desemanticization 5.3.2 Decategorialization 5.3.3 Cliticization and erosion? 5.4 Conclusion 6. Periphrases and irregular paradigms in Italo-Romance Silvio Cruschina 6.1 Introduction 6.2 Motion and progressive double inflexion constructions 6.3 The N-pattern as a periphrastic morphome 6.4 The Sicilian modal periphrasis 6.5 Conclusions ІХ 148 148 154 155 160 162 166 167 169 169 171 177 183 187 PART III. AUXILIATION 7. Auxiliary selection in Italo-Romance and inflexional classes Xavier Bach and Pavel Štichauer 7.1 Introduction 7.2 Auxiliary selection and inflexional classes 7.2.1 Content paradigm, form paradigm, and realizations 7.2.2 Segregated inflexional classes and compound tenses 7.3 Mixed perfective auxiliation systems in Italo-Romance 7.4 Mixed systems in reflexives and heteroclisis 7.4.1 Reflexives with the BBH-BBH pattern 7.4.2 Heteroclisis with default marking 7.4.3 Heteroclisis by overabundance 7.4.4 Problematic cases of heteroclisis 7.5 Conclusions 7.5.1 Theoretical problems 7.5.2 Diachronic considerations 8. The morphological nature of person-driven auxiliation: Evidence from shape conditions Michele Loporcaro 8.1 Introduction 8.2 Perfective auxiliation: syntax vs morphology 8.3 Perfective auxiliation depending on the phonology in three dialects of Apulia 8.4 A shape condition on the distribution of ‘hasTis’ 193 193 194 195 197 199 202 203
204 206 208 210 210 211 213 213 214 219 229
X CONTENTS 8.5 From complementary distribution via overabundance to heteroclisis and suppletion 8.6 The limits of morphology 8.7 Conclusion 230 233 236 PART IV. ANALYSIS VS SYNTHESIS 9. The loss of analyticky in the history of Romanian verbal morphology Adina Dragomirescu, Alexandru Nicolae, and Rodica Zafiu 9.1 Introduction 9.2 Periphrastic forms in old Romanian 9.2.1 Periphrases with the lexical verb in the infinitive 9.2.2 Periphrases with the lexical verb in the past participle 9.2.3 Periphrases with the lexical verb in the gerund/present participle 9.3 Analytic forms in modern Romanian 9.4 Analytic forms in (Daco-)Romanian dialectal varieties 9.4.1 Periphrases with the lexical verb in the infinitive 9.4.2 Periphrases with the lexical verb in the past participle forms 9.4.3 Periphrases with the lexical verb in the gerund/present participle 9.5 An account of the partial loss of analyticky in Romanian verbal morphology 9.5.1 Demise of a subset of periphrastic forms 9.5.2 Diachronically stable analytic formations 9.5.3 The relevance of analytic formations which were preserved dialectally 9.6 Conclusions: the loss of analyticky in awider perspective 10. The relation between inflexional and analytic marking of obliques in Romanian Gabriela Pană Dindelegan and Oana Uţă Bărbulescu 10.1 Introduction: marking of oblique functions in modern standard Romanian 10.2 Old Romanian 10.2.1 Distribution of inflexional and analytic markers: an overview 10.2.2 Analytic markers: distribution andcompetition 10.2.3 Mixed structures 10.2.4 Quantifiers 10.2.4.1 Homogeneous constructions vs
heterogeneous constructions 10.2.4.2 Mixed constructions 241 241 243 243 246 252 255 258 258 259 261 262 262 268 269 270 272 272 276 276 279 286 287 290 293
CONTENTS 10.3 Modern Romanian 10.4 Conclusion 11. A diachronic perspective on polymorphism, overabundance, and polyfunctionalism Rosanna Sornicola 11.1 Polymorphism and polyfunctionalism 11.2 Polymorphism and overabundance: on the history of the terms 11.2.1 Overabundance 11.3 On representing the relations between form and function 11.3.1 The relation between form and function 11.3.2 Polymorphism and free variation 11.3.3 Suppletion and syncretism 11.3.4 Polymorphism and polyfunctionalism: paradigmatic and syntagmatic relations 11.3.5 Polymorphism and polyfunctionalism in diachrony 11.4 Polymorphism and polyfunctionalism in late-medieval documents from Italy 11.5 Inflexional systems, polyfunctionalism, and polymorphism 11.6 Influence of phonetic factors 11.7 Atrophization 11.8 Overextension of the stem 11.9 Overextension of inflexion 11.10 Preservation of morphological properties of class III nouns 11.11 Differentiation and hypodifferentiation of paradigm cells 11.12 Interchangeability of forms and merging of paradigm cells 11.13 Syntactic factors 11.14 Hypercharacterization of grammatical relations 11.15 Polyfunctionalism of number and syntactic function 11.16 Towards a diachronic model of polymorphism and polyfUnctionalism ХІ 294 300 305 305 308 310 311 311 312 314 316 317 318 319 322 322 323 323 324 325 328 329 330 330 331 PART V. INFLEXION AND ITS INTERFACES 12. Thematic and lexico-aspectual constraints on V-S agreement: Evidence from northern Italo-Romance Delia Bentley and Michela Cennamo 12.1 Introduction 12.2 Theoretical preliminaries: lexico-aspectual structure and
thematic roles 12.3 The case of Emilian-Romagnol 12.3.1 Our survey 12.3.2 Cross-dialectal variation 12.3.2.1 Agreement variation with [-state] verbs 12.3.2.2 Agreement variation with [+state] verbs 12.3.2.3 Qualitative analysis: summary 335 335 338 340 340 341 342 349 355
xii CONTENTS 12.3.3 Quantitative analysis 12.4 Theoretical considerations and conclusions 13. Conditioned epenthesis in Romance Mark Aronoffand Խրէ Repetti 13.1 Introduction 13.1.1 Intrusive vowels 13.1.2 Phonological epenthesis 13.2 Case studies in Romance languages 13.2.1 Brazilian Portuguese 13.2.2 San Marino 13.2.3 Paduan 13.2.4 Italian 13.2.5 Catalan varieties 13.3 Accounts of the phenomena 13.3.1 Allomorphic solutions 13.3.2 Epenthesis 13.3.3 Interim conclusion: morphologically conditioned epenthetic segment quality 13.4 Other types of insertion 13.4.1 Catalan stem extenders 13.4.2 Italian isc 13.4.3 Spanish antesuffixes 13.5 Findings 14. Koinéization and language contact: The social causes of morphological change in and with Portuguese Tom Finbow and Paul O’Neill 14.1 Introduction 14.2 Koinéization in Romance 14.3 Koinéization in the history of Portuguese 14.3.1 Development of second-person plural pronominal and verbal forms in European Portuguese 14.3.2 Second-person singular non-deferential address in unplanned discourse of two Brazilian Portuguese varieties 14.4 Brazilian Portuguese as morphosyntactic model for indigenous languages 14.4.1 Old Tupi and Portuguese 14.4.1.1 Demonstratives and pronouns 14.4.1.2 Portuguese influence on Yegatú verb typology 14.4.1.3 Grammaticalization of ram 14.4.1.4 Grammaticalization of su ‘go’ 14.5 Conclusion References and bibliographical abbreviations Index 356 360 362 362 363 364 365 365 366 368 369 370 371 371 372 373 376 376 377 378 379 381 381 381 384 384 390 394 395 397 398 404 406 411 413 467 |
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genre | (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content |
genre_facet | Aufsatzsammlung |
id | DE-604.BV047889405 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T19:25:34Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T09:24:19Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780198870807 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-033271558 |
oclc_num | 1314901326 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-703 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-29 DE-12 |
owner_facet | DE-703 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-29 DE-12 |
physical | xxiv, 485 Seiten Diagramme, Karte 24 cm |
publishDate | 2022 |
publishDateSearch | 2022 |
publishDateSort | 2022 |
publisher | Oxford University Press |
record_format | marc |
series | Oxford studies in diachronic and historical linguistics |
series2 | Oxford studies in diachronic and historical linguistics |
spelling | Periphrasis and inflexion in diachrony a view from romance edited by Adam Ledgeway, John Charles Smith, Nigel Vincent Oxford, United Kingdom ; New York, NY Oxford University Press [2022] xxiv, 485 Seiten Diagramme, Karte 24 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Oxford studies in diachronic and historical linguistics 48 Diachronie (DE-588)4249680-9 gnd rswk-swf Flexion (DE-588)4017521-2 gnd rswk-swf Periphrase (DE-588)4173796-9 gnd rswk-swf Periphrasis Historical linguistics Grammar, Comparative and general / Inflection Romance languages / Inflection Romance languages / Periphrasis (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content Periphrase (DE-588)4173796-9 s Flexion (DE-588)4017521-2 s Diachronie (DE-588)4249680-9 s DE-604 Ledgeway, Adam 1970- (DE-588)1023556715 edt Smith, John Charles 1950- (DE-588)172925754 edt Vincent, Nigel (DE-588)1025948971 edt Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 9780192643810 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 9780191913402 Oxford studies in diachronic and historical linguistics 48 (DE-604)BV040153966 48 Digitalisierung UB Bayreuth - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=033271558&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Periphrasis and inflexion in diachrony a view from romance Oxford studies in diachronic and historical linguistics Diachronie (DE-588)4249680-9 gnd Flexion (DE-588)4017521-2 gnd Periphrase (DE-588)4173796-9 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4249680-9 (DE-588)4017521-2 (DE-588)4173796-9 (DE-588)4143413-4 |
title | Periphrasis and inflexion in diachrony a view from romance |
title_auth | Periphrasis and inflexion in diachrony a view from romance |
title_exact_search | Periphrasis and inflexion in diachrony a view from romance |
title_exact_search_txtP | Periphrasis and inflexion in diachrony a view from romance |
title_full | Periphrasis and inflexion in diachrony a view from romance edited by Adam Ledgeway, John Charles Smith, Nigel Vincent |
title_fullStr | Periphrasis and inflexion in diachrony a view from romance edited by Adam Ledgeway, John Charles Smith, Nigel Vincent |
title_full_unstemmed | Periphrasis and inflexion in diachrony a view from romance edited by Adam Ledgeway, John Charles Smith, Nigel Vincent |
title_short | Periphrasis and inflexion in diachrony |
title_sort | periphrasis and inflexion in diachrony a view from romance |
title_sub | a view from romance |
topic | Diachronie (DE-588)4249680-9 gnd Flexion (DE-588)4017521-2 gnd Periphrase (DE-588)4173796-9 gnd |
topic_facet | Diachronie Flexion Periphrase Aufsatzsammlung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=033271558&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV040153966 |
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