Ans van Kemenade
Radboud University Nijmegen
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Featured researches published by Ans van Kemenade.
Archive | 1999
Ingrid Tieken-Boon van Ostade; Gunnel Tottie; Wim van der Wurff; Frits Beukema; Jenny Cheshire; Olga Fischer; Eric Haeberli; Liliane Haegeman; 葉子 家入; Ans van Kemenade; Terttu Nevalainen; Matti P. Rissanen; 正朋 宇賀治
Its coming again, the new collection that this site has. To complete your curiosity, we offer the favorite negation in the history of english book as the choice today. This is a book that will show you even new to old thing. Forget it; it will be right for you. Well, when you are really dying of negation in the history of english, just pick it. You know, this book is always making the fans to be dizzy if not to find.
Yearbook of Morphology 2003 | 2003
Geert Booij; Ans van Kemenade
The notion ‘preverb’ is a traditional descriptive notion in Indo-European linguistics. It refers to morphemes that appear in front of a verb, and which form a close semantic unit with that verb. In many cases, the morpheme that functions as a preverb can also function without a preverbal context, often as an adverb or an adposition. Most linguists use the notion ‘preverb’ as a cover term for preverbal words and preverbal prefixes. The preverb may be separated from the verb whilst retaining its close cohesion with the verb, which is called ‘tmesis’. It may also develop into a bound morpheme, that is, a prefix inseparable from the verb, with concomitant reduction of phonological form in some cases. If the preverb has become a real prefix, we may use the more specific notion of ‘complex verb’, whereas we take the notion ‘complex predicate’ to refer generally to multi-morphemic expressions with verbal valency. That is, we make a terminological distinction between complex predicates and complex verbs. The latter are multi-morphemic, but behave as single grammatical words.
English Language and Linguistics | 2015
Nynke de Haas; Ans van Kemenade
This article presents new evidence for the early history of the Northern Subject Rule in the form of an exhaustive corpus study of plural present-tense indicative verb forms in Northern and Northern Midlands early Middle English, analysed in relation to their syntactic context, including subject type and subject–verb adjacency. We show that variation between -∅/e/n and -s endings was conditioned by both subject type and adjacency in a core area around Yorkshire, whereas in more peripheral areas, the adjacency condition was weaker and often absent. We present an analysis of these facts in relation to the presence of multiple subject positions in early English, which we show contra earlier literature to be relevant for Northern English as well, We view -∅/e/n endings as ‘true’ agreement, which in the relevant dialects is limited to contexts with pronominal subjects in a high subject position, Spec,AgrSP; other forms of agreement (-s or -th) represent default inflection occurring elsewhere. This analysis supports the hypothesis that the NSR arose when the extant morphological variation in Northern Old English was reanalysed as an effect of pre-existing multiple subject positions.
Language | 1990
Ans van Kemenade
Archive | 2000
Anthony S. Kroch; Johannes Gisli Jonsson; Ans van Kemenade; Paul Kiparsky; Willem Koopman; David Lightfoot
Archive | 2012
Ans van Kemenade; Marit Westergaard
Archive | 1989
Hans Bennis; Ans van Kemenade; Algemene Vereniging voor Taalwetenschap
Catalan journal of linguistics | 2011
Theresa Biberauer; Ans van Kemenade
Folia Linguistica Historica | 1992
Ans van Kemenade
Studia Linguistica | 2014
Marion Elenbaas; Ans van Kemenade