All Stories

  1. Romanian DOM and Loss of Analyzability
  2. Introduction: Balkan Romance Within the Balkan Sprachbund
  3. The commitment of rhetorical questions
  4. Istro-Romanian Subjunctive Clauses
  5. The dative/accusative alternations in Old Romanian
  6. Subjunctives in Romanian Languages: Micro-Parametric Variation in Complement CPs and the Periphrastic Future
  7. The syntactization of kinship in vocative phrases
  8. The acquisition of adverbs in child L3 French in Canada
  9. Syntactic patterns for Romanian olfactive verbs
  10. Grammaticalization of auxiliaries and parametric changes
  11. Evidentiality and Raising to Object as A′-Movement: A Romanian Case Study
  12. Root gerunds in Old Romanian
  13. Verb Movement and Clause Structure in Old Romanian
  14. Research background and theoretical framework
  15. Subjects, complementizers, and clitics
  16. Imperative clauses
  17. Gerund clauses
  18. High verb movement in finite clauses
  19. De-indicatives: A faithful replica of the Balkan subjunctive
  20. A-infinitives: A version of the Balkan subjunctive
  21. Să-subjunctives: Another version of the Balkan subjunctive
  22. Supine clauses: On the road to balkanization
  23. Formal Approaches to DPs in Old Romanian
  24. From preposition to topic marker: Old Romanian pe
  25. Discourse-driven V-to-C in Early Modern Romanian
  26. DE-Infinitives as Complements to Romanian Nouns
  27. Vocatives
  28. 8 Taking Stock
  29. 7 Ramifications—The Imperative
  30. 1 A Formal Twist for the Same Old Story
  31. 5 The Speech Act Connection: Particles of Direct Address
  32. 6 The Vocative and the Clause
  33. 4 The System Behind the Noise
  34. 3 The Core of the Matter: Identifying and Interacting with the Addressee
  35. 2 Back to the (Theoretical) Drawing Board: Was Ross Right After All?
  36. The emergence of the Romanian supine
  37. The Syntacticization of Discourse*
  38. The Direct Object Marker in Romanian: A Historical Perspective
  39. The emergence of the Romanian subjunctive
  40. Chapter 15. Vocatives
  41. Romanian ‘can’
  42. Object Clitic Omission in French-Speaking Children: Effects of the Elicitation Task
  43. A main clause complementizer
  44. Mapping the information structure in Early Modern Bulgarian clauses with the particle TA
  45. Modal grammaticalization and the pragmatic field
  46. Edges, Heads, and Projections
  47. Introduction
  48. 5. Romanian clitic doubling: A view from pragmatics-semantics and diachrony
  49. Vocatives and the pragmatics–syntax interface
  50. Romanian adverbs and the pragmatic field
  51. An irrealis BE auxiliary in Romanian
  52. Stylistic Inversion in Romanian*
  53. On left periphery and focus
  54. The gray area of supine clauses
  55. Adhering Focus
  56. The Syntax of Romanian: Comparative Studies in Romance
  57. Features and strategies: the internal syntax of vocative phrases
  58. Introduction