Linguistics in the Netherlands 2015
Editors
| The Ohio State University & Leiden University
| Leiden University & University of Amsterdam
The 46th annual conference of the Linguistic Society of the Netherlands took place in Utrecht on 7 February, 2015. The annual meetings provide members with the opportunity to report on their ongoing research.
At this year's meeting, 86 papers were presented, of which 21 were submitted in writing to the present volume. The volume contains an internationally peer-reviewed selection of these papers, which may be considered representative of current research in the Netherlands, in various fields of linguistics.
[Linguistics in the Netherlands, 32] 2015. iv, 169 pp.
Publishing status: Available
© Algemene Vereniging voor Taalwetenschap
Available under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial (CC BY-NC) 4.0 license.
For any use beyond this license, please contact the publisher at rights@benjamins.nl.
Table of Contents
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Tangled up in mood: Exploring Panará split ergativityBernat Bardagil-Mas | pp. 1–15
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Grammatical and pragmatic properties of the DP in children with Specific Language Impairment (SLI) and in children with High Functioning Autism (HFA)Ava Creemers & Jeannette C. Schaeffer | pp. 16–32
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Three types of suffixes in French: Discarding the learned / non-learned distinctionJan Don, Petra Sleeman & Thom Westveer | pp. 33–47
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On the syntactic nature of the Dutch prefixPaula Fenger, Ava Creemers & Marlijn Meijer | pp. 48–62
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Prepositional object gaps in British EnglishJames Griffiths & Craig Sailor | pp. 63–74
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‘A relieved Obama’ won’t last longHelen de Hoop & Erica Kemperman | pp. 75–87
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Crossover restrictions, A-bar pronouns and discourse antecedentsJacqueline van Kampen | pp. 88–104
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A case of cultural evolution: The emergence of morphological caseSander Lestrade | pp. 105–115
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Prosody, melody and rhythm in vocal music: The problem of textsetting in a linguistic perspectiveTeresa Proto | pp. 116–129
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Distributive, collective and “everything” in between: Interpretation of universal quantifiers in child and adult languageLiset Rouweler & Bart Hollebrandse | pp. 130–141
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Events, locations and situations: On the interaction of negation and finiteness in AvarPavel Rudnev | pp. 142–154
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Acquisition of adjectival degree markers by Dutch- and Russian-speaking children: The richer the faster?Elena Tribushinina | pp. 155–169
Articles
Subjects
Linguistics
BIC Subject: CF – Linguistics
BISAC Subject: LAN009000 – LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / General