Review published In:
Diachronica
Vol. 28:2 (2011) ► pp.281289
References (12)
References
Eckardt, Regine. 2006. Meaning Change in Grammaticalization. Oxford: Oxford University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Gardiner, Alan H. 1904. “The word iwn3 ”. Zeitschrift für Ägyptische Sprache und Altertumskunde 411.130–135.Google Scholar
Jespersen, Otto. 1917. Negation in English and Other Languages. (= Historisk-filologiske Meddelelser, 11). Copenhagen: A. F. Høst.Google Scholar
Longobardi, Giuseppe. 2001. “Formal syntax, diachronic minimalism, and etymology: The history of French chez ”. Linguistic Inquiry 321.275–302. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Norde, Muriel. 2001. “Deflexion as a counterdirectional factor in grammatical change”. Language Sciences 231.231–264. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
. 2009. Degrammaticalization. Oxford: Oxford University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Roberts, Ian. 2007. Diachronic Syntax. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Van Gelderen, Elly. 2004a. “Economy, innovation and prescriptivism: From Spec to head and head to head”. Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics 71.59–98. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
. 2004b. Grammaticalization as Economy. (= Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today 711). Amsterdam: John Benjamins. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Willis, David. 2007. “Syntactic lexicalization as a new type of degrammaticalization”. Linguistics 451.271–310. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
. 2010. “Degrammaticalization and obsolescent morphology: Evidence from Slavonic”. Grammaticalization: Current views and issues ed. by Elke Gehweiler, Ekkehard König & Katerina Stathi, 151–177. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Zeijlstra, Hedde H. 2004. Sentential Negation and Negative Concord. PhD dissertation, University of Amsterdam.Google Scholar