In:Historical Linguistics 2015: Selected papers from the 22nd International Conference on Historical Linguistics, Naples, 27-31 July 2015
Edited by Michela Cennamo and Claudia Fabrizio
[Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 348] 2019
► pp. v–viii
Get fulltext
This article is available free of charge.
Published online: 10 September 2019
https://doi.org/10.1075/cilt.348.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/cilt.348.toc
Table of contents
Introduction
1
Michela Cennamo
Claudia Fabrizio
Part I.Phonology
9
Chapter 1.Old Irish consonant quality re-examined
11
Hans Henrich Hock
Chapter 2.The use of the past to explain the past: Roman grammarians and the collapse of vowel quantity
27
Marco Mancini
Chapter 3.Pertinacity in loanwords: Same underlying systems, different outputs
57
Aditi Lahiri
Holly Kennard
Part II.Morphology
75
Chapter 4.Ablaut in Armenian nasal declension
77
Giancarlo Schirru
Chapter 5.Gender and declension mismatches in West Nordic
97
Ivar Berg
Chapter 6.The development of gender and countability effects in German ung- and English ing-nominals
115
Martina Werner
Gianina Iordăchioaia
Chapter 7.Where do Italian -ata nouns come from? Some new diachronic evidence on a Romance derivational pattern
133
Claudia Fabrizio
Chapter 8.Diachrony and Morphological Equilibrium: The Case of the Southern New Indo-Aryan Verb
149
Paolo Milizia
Chapter 9.Anti-relevant, contra-iconic but system-adequate: On unexpected inflectional changes
171
Livio Gaeta
Part III.Morphosyntax
185
Chapter 10.Impersonal passives and the suffix -r in the Indo-European languages
187
Francesco Rovai
Chapter 11.The Old English verbal prefixes for- and ge-: Their effects on the transitivity of morphological causative pairs
217
Esaúl Ruiz Narbona
Part IV.Syntax
243
Chapter 12.Enclitic -(m)a ‘but’/ -(y)a ‘and’ in Hittite: Losing extraordinary syntactic behavior
245
Andrei Sidelstev
Chapter 13.State representation and dynamic processes in Homeric Greek: The aorist in -ην in Homeric Greek
271
Domenica Romagno
Chapter 14.Effecting a change: Perfect and middle in some Indo-European languages
287
Romano Lazzeroni
Chapter 15.Early Indo-European dialects and innovations of aspect systems
301
Jadranka Gvozdanović
Chapter 16.Perfecting the notion of Sprachbund: Perfects and resultatives in the ‘Stratified Convergenze Zones’ of Europe
319
Bridget Drinka
Chapter 17.Parameters in the development of Romance perfective auxiliary
343
Adam Ledgeway
Chapter 18.Adverbs and the left periphery of non-finite clauses in Old Spanish
385
Teresa María Rodríguez Ramalle
Cristina Matute
Part V.Diachronic Typology
403
Chapter 19.The sources of antipassive constructions: A cross-linguistic survey
405
Andrea Sansò
Chapter 20.A diachronic account of converbal constructions in Old Rajasthani
423
Krzysztof Stroński
Joanna Tokaj
Saartje Verbeke
Part VI.Semantics and Pragmatics
443
Chapter 21.The locative Alternation with spray/load verbs in Old English
445
Katarzyna Sówka-Pietraszewska
Chapter 22.Penetration of French-origin lexis in Middle English occupational domains
459
Richard Ingham
Louise Sylvester
Imogen Marcus
Chapter 23.Meaning change from superlatives to definite descriptions: A semantic approach
479
Jun Chen
Dawei Jin
Chapter 24.Towards diachronic word classes universals
501
Matthias Gerner
Chapter 25.Grammaticalizing the face in a first generation sign language: The case of “Z”
519
John B. Haviland
Part VII.Language contact, variation and diffusion
561
Chapter 26.Linguistic divergence under contact
563
Nicholas Evans
Chapter 27.Roots and branches of variation across dialects of English
593
Sali Tagliamonte
Chapter 28.Waves in computer simulations of linguistic diffusion
615
Luzius Thöny
Index
631
