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Linguistics in the Netherlands 2004

Editors
Jenny Doetjes | Utrecht University, OTS & University of Leiden, ULCL
PaperbackAvailable
ISBN 9789027231642 (Eur) | EUR 88.00
ISBN 9781588115645 (USA) | USD 132.00
 
e-JournalAvailable
| EUR 0.00
[Linguistics in the Netherlands, 21] 2004.  viii, 229 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 24 August 2004
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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
Preface
Leonie Cornips and Jenny Doetjes
v
Contributors
vi–vii
Articles
Topic and focus within D
Enoch O. Aboh
1–12
Is Dutch a multiple fronting language?
Janneke ter Beek
13–24
Conditional imperatives in Dutch and Russian
Ronny Boogaart and Radoslava Trnavac
25–35
Auxiliary drop in Early Modern German
Anne Breitbarth
36–46
Acquiring voicing in Dutch: The role of function words
Suzanne van der Feest
47–57
The role of language-specific phonotactics in the acquisition of onset clusters
Paula Fikkert and M. João Freitas
58–68
Number in the Yurakaré noun phrase
Rik van Gijn
69–79
Nominal tense marking in Movima: Nominal or clausal scope?
Katharina Haude
80–90
The perceptual development of a British-English phoneme contrast in Dutch adults
Willemijn Heeren
91–101
Phonetic or phonological contrasts in Dutch boundary tones?
Vincent J. van Heuven and Robert S. Kirsner
102–113
Alles is fleurich, ik bin it mei: On the comitative particle mei in Frisian and its counterparts in the other Germanic languages
Jarich Hoekstra
114–124
Does the chronology principle operate on sentence level? Evidence from the distribution of adverbial PP’s
Frank Jansen
125–133
Seven years later: The effect of spelling on interpretation
Anneke Neijt, Robert Schreuder and Harald Baayen
134–145
Multi-level OT: An argument from speech pathology
Dirk-Bart den Ouden
146–157
The acquisition of definiteness distinctions by L2 learners of French
Petra Sleeman
158–168
Exploring Cantonese tense
Rint Sybesma
169–180
Pseudo coordination is not subordination
Mark de Vos
181–192
Head-internal relative clauses in Dutch?
Mark de Vries
193–204
Cross-linguistic confusion of vowels produced and perceived by Chinese, Dutch and American speakers of English
Hongyan Wang and Vincent J. van Heuven
205–216
On segmental complexity: Affricates and patterns of segmental modification in consonant inventories
Jeroen van de Weijer and Frans Hinskens
217–228
“[...] a well-rounded collection of the papers presented at the 35th annual meeting of the Linguistic Society of the Netherlands.”
Cited by (1)

Cited by one other publication

Ojea, Ana
2024. The Syntax of Speech Acts: Deictic Inversion as an Evidential Strategy in English. Languages 9:5  pp. 183 ff. DOI logo

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