In:Particles in German, English, and Beyond
Edited by Remus Gergel, Ingo Reich and Augustin Speyer
[Studies in Language Companion Series 224] 2022
► pp. v–vi
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Published online: 16 August 2022
https://doi.org/10.1075/slcs.224.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/slcs.224.toc
Table of contents
Chapter 1.Particles: A brief synchronic, diachronic and contrastive introduction
1
Remus Gergel
Ingo Reich
Augustin Speyer
Chapter 2.From up-toning intensifying particle to scalar focus particle: A new developmental path
25
Irina Eberhardt
Chapter 3.Do intensifiers lose their expressive force over time? A corpus linguistic study
69
Jessica Schmidt
Chapter 4.The interpretation of the German additive particle auch (‘too, also’) in quantificational contexts
95
Madeleine Butschety
Chapter 5.The German modal particle ja and selected English lexical correlates in the Europarl corpus: As you know, after all, of course, in fact and indeed
117
Volker Gast
Chapter 6.Syntactic change and pragmatic maintenance: The discourse particle then over the history of English
147
Ans van Kemenade
Chapter 7.Final though
177
Maike Puhl
Remus Gergel
Chapter 8.A comparative study of German auch and Italian anche: Functional convergences and structural differences
209
Federica Cognola
Manuela Caterina Moroni
Ermenegildo Bidese
Chapter 9.Scalarity as a meaning atom in wohl-type particles
243
Patrick G. Grosz
Chapter 10.Modal particles in questions and wh-sensitivity: A view from French and German
269
Pierre-Yves Modicom
Chapter 11.PP-internal particles in Dutch as evidence for PP-internal discourse structure
297
Andreas Trotzkea
Liliane Haegeman
Chapter 12.Mandarin exhaustive focus shì and the syntax of discourse congruence
323
Michael Yoshitaka Erlewine
Chapter 13.Evidentiality and the QUD: A study of talán ‘perhaps’ in Hungarian declaratives and interrogatives
355
Beáta Gyuris
Index
381
