All Stories

  1. The Romanticist tradition in Linguistics and its relevance today to modernizing typology
  2. The early use of the term "pronomenaisation" (pronominalization)
  3. Looking for why language patterns are the way they are
  4. Noun-modifying clause constructions in Sino-Tibetan languages
  5. Once again on methodology and argumentation in linguistics
  6. The Sino-Tibetan Languages
  7. Review of the book The Language Myth, by Vyvyan Evans
  8. On categorization: Stick to the facts of the languages
  9. On Scholarship in Sino-Tibetan Linguistics
  10. Language Structure and Environment
  11. Sino-Tibetan Syntax
  12. Chapter 2. On the logical necessity of a cultural and cognitive connection for the origin of all aspects of linguistic structure
  13. Towards a new approach to evidentiality
  14. Constituent Structure in a Tagalog Text
  15. 25 Eastern Asia: Sino-Tibetan linguistic history
  16. Subgrouping in Tibeto-Burman
  17. Studies in Transitivity
  18. On Transitivity
  19. On transitivity in two Tibeto-Burman languages
  20. The Georg von der Gabelentz Award 2009
  21. Language Contact and Language Change in the History of the Sinitic Languages
  22. The Copula and Existential Verbs in Qiang
  23. The Sino-Tibetan Languages
  24. Qiang Randy J. LaPolla
  25. Dulong Randy J. LaPolla
  26. Overview of Sino-Tibetan morphosyntax Randy J. LaPolla
  27. On grammatical relations as constraints on referent identification
  28. Li Fang-Kuei (1902–1989)
  29. Chao Yuen Ren (1892–1982)
  30. Sino-Tibetan Languages
  31. Wang Li (1900–1986)
  32. The inclusive-exclusive distinction in Tibeto-Burman languages
  33. The Sino-Tibetan Languages. Edited by Thurgood Graham and Randy J. LaPolla. Routledge Language Family Series, no. 3. London: Routledge, 2003. xxii, 727 pp. $295.00 (cloth).
  34. A Grammar of Qiang
  35. 3. Evidentiality in Qiang
  36. A grammar of Meithei
  37. Valency-changing derivations in Dulong/Rawang
  38. Syntax
  39. References
  40. Notes
  41. Notes for instructors
  42. Information structure
  43. The goals of linguistic theory
  44. Grammatical relations
  45. Syntactic structure, I: simple clauses and noun phrases
  46. Semantic representation, I: verbs and arguments
  47. Semantic representation, II: macroroles, the lexicon and noun phrases
  48. Linking syntax and semantics in simple sentences
  49. Syntactic structure, II: complex sentences and noun phrases
  50. Linking syntax and semantics in complex sentences
  51. Epilog: the goals of linguistic theory revisited
  52. Book Review (2)
  53. Understanding Utterances: An Introduction to Pragmatics
  54. An experimental investigation into phonetic symbolism as it relates to Mandarin Chinese
  55. Pragmatic relations and word order in Chinese
  56. The Classical Tibetan Language
  57. On the dating and nature of verb agreement in Tibeto-Burman
  58. Verb Agreement, Head-Marking vs. Dependent-Marking, and the ‘Deconstruction’ of Tibeto-Burman Morpho-Syntax