All Stories

  1. Where do demonstratives come from?
  2. Historical change in the Japanese tense-aspect system
  3. Constructional change vs. grammaticalization
  4. (Inter)subjectification and its limits in secondary grammaticalization
  5. The Expression of Non-epistemic Modal Categories
  6. Perspectives on Semantic Roles
  7. Coding causal–noncausal verb alternations: A form–frequency correspondence explanation
  8. Review of Narrog (2012): Modality, subjectivity and semantic change: A crosslinguistic perspective
  9. Review of Narrog & Heine (2011): The Oxford Handbook of Grammaticalization
  10. Heiko Narrog and Bernd Heine (eds.), 2011. The Oxford Handbook of Grammaticalization. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  11. Perspectives on semantic roles
  12. What typology reveals about modality 
in Japanese: A cross-linguistic perspective*
  13. The grammaticalization chain of case functions
  14. Beyond intersubjectification
  15. Review of Narrog & Heine (2011): The Oxford handbook of grammaticalization
  16. Chapter 13. Grammaticalization of space in Korean and Japanese
  17. Heiko Narrog u. Bernd Heine (Hgg.): The Oxford handbook of grammaticalization
  18. Osterkamp, Sven. 2011. Nicht-monosyllabische Phonogramme im Altjapanischen. Kritische Bestandaufnahme und Systematisierung der Fälle vom Typ oñgana. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz.
  19. Modality, Subjectivity, and Semantic Change
  20. Introduction
  21. Conclusions
  22. Modality and Subjectivity
  23. Modality and Semantic Change
  24. Illustrating the Model
  25. Into (and Out of) Modality
  26. Cross‐Linguistic Patterns of Polysemy and Change within Modality and Mood
  27. Shifts Between Types of Modality in Traditional Terms
  28. Review of Heine & Narrog (): The Oxford Handbook of Linguistic Analysis
  29. Beyond intersubjectification
  30. Review of Van Linden, Verstraete & Davidse (2010): Formal evidence in grammaticalization
  31. Introduction
  32. The Oxford Handbook of Grammaticalization
  33. Grammaticalization and semantic maps
  34. Grammaticalization in Japanese
  35. Review of Stolz, Stroh & Urdze (2006): On comitatives and related categories: A typological study with special focus on the languages of Europe & Endruschat (2007): Durch ‘mit’ eingeleitete präpositionale Objekte in den romanischen Sprachen
  36. Review of Narrog (2009): Modality in Japanese: The layered structure of the clause and hierarchies of functional categories
  37. (Inter)subjectification in the domain of modality and mood – Concepts and cross-linguistic realities
  38. The order of meaningful elements in the Japanese verbal complex
  39. Commentary on Cysouw - What Should Be on a Map?
  40. Commentary on Malchukov - Optimizing Classical Maps
  41. Author's Reply: Towards More Informative Maps
  42. Voice and non-canonical case marking in the expression of event-oriented modality
  43. A Diachronic Dimension in Maps of Case Functions
  44. Commentary on de Haan - Evidentiality in Epistemic Modality: Let's Get the Whole Picture
  45. Commentary on Narrog - The Best of Two Maps
  46. Introduction
  47. Grammaticalization and Linguistic Analysis
  48. The Oxford Handbook of Linguistic Analysis
  49. Modality in Japanese
  50. Case Polysemy
  51. Varieties of Instrumental
  52. The aspect-modality link in the Japanese verbal complex and beyond
  53. A note on modality and aspect in Saramaccan
  54. Re-constructing semantic maps: the comitative-instrumental area
  55. Modality and grammaticalization in Japanese
  56. Non-nominative subjects (review)
  57. Die Relativkonstruktionen im Chinesischen: Eine diachrone Studie (review)
  58. A Renaissance for Historical Semantics (E. C. Traugott and R. B. Dasher, Regularity in Semantic Change)
  59. On defining modality again
  60. Modality, mood, and change of modal meanings: A new perspective
  61. La modalite epistemique en basque (review)
  62. Modality and the Japanese Language (review)
  63. Ellipsis and Reference Tracking in Japanese (review)
  64. Polysemy: Flexible Patterns of Meaning in Mind and Language (review)
  65. From transitive to causative in Japanese
  66. A Rainbow of Corpora: Corpus Linguistics and the Languages of the World (review)
  67. CAUSATIVES AS HONORIFICS