Table of contents
Forewordv
On the Morphological Analysis of German: In Defense of the Category Adjective/Adverb1
On Two Case-Based Reanalysis Representations of the Causative Construction in Dutch27
The Unaccusative Hypothesis and a Reflexive Construction in German and Dutch39
On the Origin and Development of Relative Clauses in Early Germanic, with Special Emphasis on
Beowulf55
Out of Control: Control Theory and its Implications for Empty Categories, Expletives, and Missing Subjects in German91
Modern Evidence for Ancient Sound Changes: Old English Breaking and Old High German Vowel Epenthesis Revisited103
Inflections and Paradigms in German Nominal Declension115
Phonologization in Germanic: Umlauts and Vowel Shifts125
The Sound-Shift Revisited — or Jacob Grimm Vindicated139
The Role of Semantic Restrictions in German Passive Formation147
The Rise of Periphrastic Tenses in German: The Case Against Latin Influence161
On the Syllabic Motivation of Inflectional Suffixes in Germanic169
On a Parameter of Case Percolation185
Master List of References195
Index of Names213
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