ARTICLES

Filter  
Active filters 0
Remove
  

Refine your searches by:

Collections
Education
Social Sciences
Mathematics
History
Literature
Architecture and Urbanism
Languages
Agronomy and forestry
Biology
Pure sciences
all records (64)

Languages
English
Spanish
Portuguese
German

Countries
USA
Brazil
Indonesia
Germany
Denmark
Chile
Argentina
Ecuador
Poland
South Africa
all records (52)

Years
2023
2022
2021
2020
2019
2018
2017
2016
2015
2014
all records (24)

Filter  
 
843  Articles
1 of 85 pages  |  10  records  |  more records»
Abstract: This paper investigates the referential properties of third person anaphors in two closely related languages, Finnish and Estonian. Previous crosslinguistic research has shown that the most salient referents are referred to with the most reduced... see more

Abstract: This paper investigates the referential properties of third person anaphors in two closely related languages, Finnish and Estonian. Previous crosslinguistic research has shown that the most salient referents are referred to with the most reduced... see more

Research on reference resolution has shown that there exists a connection between the form of a referring expression and the accessibility/salience of its referent. More specifically, the most salient referents – i.e. those currently at the center of atte... see more

In this paper I investigate a seemingly optional variation between accusative and partitive case in Finnish in yes/no questions and certain kinds of negative contexts. I discuss two possible approaches: (i) the focus/background approach, which argues that... see more

This paper reports on a psycholinguistic experiment investigating information used in incremental interpretation to assign grammatical roles to case-marked nouns. The three core grammatical cases in Estonian – nominative, partitive and genitive – are synt... see more

Imposters are grammatically third-person expressions used to refer to the first-person speaker or second-person addressee (e.g. ‘the present authors’ when used to refer to the first-person writer, or ‘yours truly’ when used to refer to the speaker.) I pre... see more

In linguistic communication, in addition to referring to specific, known referents, we also need to deal with unknown, generic or non-specific referents. I investigated how the English generic you and impersonal they compare to the Finnish zero person con... see more

In this paper I investigate a seemingly optional variation between accusative and partitive case in Finnish in yes/no questions and certain kinds of negative contexts. I discuss two possible approaches: (i) the focus/background approach, which argues that... see more

Research on reference resolution has shown that there exists a connection between the form of a referring expression and the accessibility/salience of its referent. More specifically, the most salient referents – i.e. those currently at the center of atte... see more

1 of 85 pages  |  10  records  |  more records»