In:Up and down the Cline – The Nature of Grammaticalization
Edited by Olga Fischer, Muriel Norde and Harry Perridon
[Typological Studies in Language 59] 2004
► pp. v–vi
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Published online: 28 May 2004
https://doi.org/10.1075/tsl.59.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/tsl.59.toc
Table of contents
Prefacevii
Introduction: In search of grammaticalization
On directionality in language change with particular reference to grammaticalization
Rescuing traditional (historical) linguistics from grammaticalization theory
The English s-genitive: A case of degrammaticalization?
An investigation into the marginal modals dare and need in British present-day English: A corpus-based approach
Redefining unidirectionality: Is there life after modality?
From pronominalizer to pragmatic marker: Implications for unidirectionality from a crosslinguistic perspective
Conditionals and subjectification: Implications for a theory of semantic change
Unidirectionality in the grammaticalization of modality in Greek
How cognitive is grammaticalization? The history of the Catalan perfet perifràstic
Perfect and resultative constructions in spoken and non-standard English
Grammaticalization and standardization
External factors behind cross-linguistic similarities
What constitutes a case of grammaticalization? Evidence from the development of copulas from demonstratives in Passamaquoddy
Multi-categorial items as underspecified lexical entries: The case of Kambera wàngu
The acquisition of polysemous forms: The case of bei2 (“give”) in Cantonese
Phonetic absence as syntactic prominence: Grammaticalization in isolating tonal languages
Grammaticalization of word order: Evidence from Lithuanian
