Andreas Dufter
List of John Benjamins publications for which Andreas Dufter plays a role.
Journal
Titles
Left Sentence Peripheries in Spanish: Diachronic, Variationist and Comparative Perspectives
Edited by Andreas Dufter and Álvaro S. Octavio de Toledo y Huerta
[Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today, 214] 2014. viii, 423 pp.
Subjects Generative linguistics | Historical linguistics | Romance linguistics | Sociolinguistics and Dialectology | Syntax | Theoretical linguistics
Focus and Background in Romance Languages
Edited by Andreas Dufter and Daniel Jacob
[Studies in Language Companion Series, 112] 2009. vii, 362 pp.
Subjects Romance linguistics | Semantics | Syntax | Theoretical linguistics
Introduction Left Sentence Peripheries in Spanish: Diachronic, Variationist and Comparative Perspectives, Dufter, Andreas and Álvaro S. Octavio de Toledo y Huerta (eds.), pp. 1–20 | Chapter
2014 Preface Left Sentence Peripheries in Spanish: Diachronic, Variationist and Comparative Perspectives, Dufter, Andreas and Álvaro S. Octavio de Toledo y Huerta (eds.), pp. vii–viii | Preface
2014 Clefting and discourse organization: Comparing Germanic and Romance Focus and Background in Romance Languages, Dufter, Andreas and Daniel Jacob (eds.), pp. 83–121 | Article
2009 Preface Focus and Background in Romance Languages, Dufter, Andreas and Daniel Jacob (eds.), p. | Preface
2009 Introduction Focus and Background in Romance Languages, Dufter, Andreas and Daniel Jacob (eds.), pp. 1–18 | Article
2009 Natural Versification in French and German counting-out rhymes Towards a Typology of Poetic Forms: From language to metrics and beyond, Aroui, Jean-Louis and Andy Arleo (eds.), pp. 101–122 | Article
2009 Nursery rhymes have frequently been regarded as a testing ground for hypotheses concerning metrical and prosodic unmarkedness. The recurrence of tetrametric patterns and the unmarkedness of binary feet, for example, have been interpreted as a universal of child(-directed) verse, and of folk verse… read more
On explaining the rise of c'est-clefts in French The Paradox of Grammatical Change: Perspectives from Romance, Detges, Ulrich and Richard Waltereit (eds.), pp. 31–56 | Article
2008 In Contemporary French, c’est-clefts are claimed to occur with significantly higher frequency than their counterparts in other Romance languages and in older stages of French. Starting out from the assumption that c’est-clefts exist in order to mark focus on the clefted constituent, historical… read more
Double indirect object marking in Spanish and Italian Theoretical and Empirical Issues in Grammaticalization, Seoane, Elena and María José López-Couso (eds.), pp. 111–129 | Article
2008