Alignment and Alignment Change in the Indo-European Family
Herausgeber: Dahl, Eystein
Alignment and Alignment Change in the Indo-European Family
Herausgeber: Dahl, Eystein
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This volume brings together work from leading specialists in Indo-European languages to explore the macro- and micro-dynamic factors that contribute to variation and change in alignment and argument realization. The chapters have a strong empirical focus, drawing on data from Anatolian, Indo-Iranian, Greek, Italic, Armenian, and Slavic.
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This volume brings together work from leading specialists in Indo-European languages to explore the macro- and micro-dynamic factors that contribute to variation and change in alignment and argument realization. The chapters have a strong empirical focus, drawing on data from Anatolian, Indo-Iranian, Greek, Italic, Armenian, and Slavic.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 388
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. November 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 237mm x 164mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 866g
- ISBN-13: 9780198857907
- ISBN-10: 019885790X
- Artikelnr.: 66115569
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 388
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. November 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 237mm x 164mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 866g
- ISBN-13: 9780198857907
- ISBN-10: 019885790X
- Artikelnr.: 66115569
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Eystein Dahl is a Research Associate in the Department of Language and Culture at UiT - The Arctic University of Norway. He has previously held positions at the University of Bergen, and at Goethe University in Frankfurt. His primary research interests lie in the interface between comparative philology and diachronic typology, and much of his recent work focuses on tense/aspect semantics, alignment typology, and morphosyntactic change in Vedic Sanskrit, Latin, Ancient Greek, and Hittite.
* 1: Eystein Dahl: Alignment and alignment change in the Indo-European
family and beyond
* 2: Eystein Dahl: Alignment in Proto-Indo-European
* 3: Paola Cotticelli and Eystein Dahl: Split-alignment, mixed
alignment, and non-canonical argument marking in some archaic
Indo-European languages
* 4: Silvia Luraghi and Guglielmo Inglese (with an appendix by Petra
Goedegebuure): The origin of ergative case markers: The case of
Hittite revised
* 5: Hans Henrich Hock: Passives and anticausatives in Vedic Sanskrit:
Synchronic and diachronic perspectives
* 6: Michela Cennamo and Claudia Fabrizio: Non-nominative arguments,
active impersonals, and control in Latin
* 7: Claudia Fabrizio: Infinitives and subjecthood between Latin and
Old Italian
* 8: Chantal Melis: Alignment changes with Spanish experiential verbs
* 9: Robin Meyer: Armenian morphosyntactic alignment in diachrony
* 10: Ilja A. Serant, Björn Wiemer, Eleni Buarovska, Martina Ivanová,
Maxim Makartsev, Stefan Savi¿, Dmitri Sitchinava, Karolína Skwarska,
and Mladen Uhlik: Areal and diachronic trends in argument flagging
across Slavic
family and beyond
* 2: Eystein Dahl: Alignment in Proto-Indo-European
* 3: Paola Cotticelli and Eystein Dahl: Split-alignment, mixed
alignment, and non-canonical argument marking in some archaic
Indo-European languages
* 4: Silvia Luraghi and Guglielmo Inglese (with an appendix by Petra
Goedegebuure): The origin of ergative case markers: The case of
Hittite revised
* 5: Hans Henrich Hock: Passives and anticausatives in Vedic Sanskrit:
Synchronic and diachronic perspectives
* 6: Michela Cennamo and Claudia Fabrizio: Non-nominative arguments,
active impersonals, and control in Latin
* 7: Claudia Fabrizio: Infinitives and subjecthood between Latin and
Old Italian
* 8: Chantal Melis: Alignment changes with Spanish experiential verbs
* 9: Robin Meyer: Armenian morphosyntactic alignment in diachrony
* 10: Ilja A. Serant, Björn Wiemer, Eleni Buarovska, Martina Ivanová,
Maxim Makartsev, Stefan Savi¿, Dmitri Sitchinava, Karolína Skwarska,
and Mladen Uhlik: Areal and diachronic trends in argument flagging
across Slavic
* 1: Eystein Dahl: Alignment and alignment change in the Indo-European
family and beyond
* 2: Eystein Dahl: Alignment in Proto-Indo-European
* 3: Paola Cotticelli and Eystein Dahl: Split-alignment, mixed
alignment, and non-canonical argument marking in some archaic
Indo-European languages
* 4: Silvia Luraghi and Guglielmo Inglese (with an appendix by Petra
Goedegebuure): The origin of ergative case markers: The case of
Hittite revised
* 5: Hans Henrich Hock: Passives and anticausatives in Vedic Sanskrit:
Synchronic and diachronic perspectives
* 6: Michela Cennamo and Claudia Fabrizio: Non-nominative arguments,
active impersonals, and control in Latin
* 7: Claudia Fabrizio: Infinitives and subjecthood between Latin and
Old Italian
* 8: Chantal Melis: Alignment changes with Spanish experiential verbs
* 9: Robin Meyer: Armenian morphosyntactic alignment in diachrony
* 10: Ilja A. Serant, Björn Wiemer, Eleni Buarovska, Martina Ivanová,
Maxim Makartsev, Stefan Savi¿, Dmitri Sitchinava, Karolína Skwarska,
and Mladen Uhlik: Areal and diachronic trends in argument flagging
across Slavic
family and beyond
* 2: Eystein Dahl: Alignment in Proto-Indo-European
* 3: Paola Cotticelli and Eystein Dahl: Split-alignment, mixed
alignment, and non-canonical argument marking in some archaic
Indo-European languages
* 4: Silvia Luraghi and Guglielmo Inglese (with an appendix by Petra
Goedegebuure): The origin of ergative case markers: The case of
Hittite revised
* 5: Hans Henrich Hock: Passives and anticausatives in Vedic Sanskrit:
Synchronic and diachronic perspectives
* 6: Michela Cennamo and Claudia Fabrizio: Non-nominative arguments,
active impersonals, and control in Latin
* 7: Claudia Fabrizio: Infinitives and subjecthood between Latin and
Old Italian
* 8: Chantal Melis: Alignment changes with Spanish experiential verbs
* 9: Robin Meyer: Armenian morphosyntactic alignment in diachrony
* 10: Ilja A. Serant, Björn Wiemer, Eleni Buarovska, Martina Ivanová,
Maxim Makartsev, Stefan Savi¿, Dmitri Sitchinava, Karolína Skwarska,
and Mladen Uhlik: Areal and diachronic trends in argument flagging
across Slavic







