Cited by

Cited by 23 other publications

Bank, Richard, Onno Crasborn & Roeland van Hout
2015. Alignment of two languages: The spreading of mouthings in Sign Language of the Netherlands. International Journal of Bilingualism 19:1  pp. 40 ff. DOI logo
Brentari, Diane & Marie Coppola
2013. What sign language creation teaches us about language. WIREs Cognitive Science 4:2  pp. 201 ff. DOI logo
Brentari, Diane & Susan Goldin-Meadow
2017. Language Emergence. Annual Review of Linguistics 3:1  pp. 363 ff. DOI logo
Byun, Kang‐Suk, Connie de Vos, Anastasia Bradford, Ulrike Zeshan & Stephen C. Levinson
2018. First Encounters: Repair Sequences in Cross‐Signing. Topics in Cognitive Science 10:2  pp. 314 ff. DOI logo
de Vos, Connie
2023. Cognitive pragmatics: Insights from homesign conversations. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 46 DOI logo
de Vos, Connie & Roland Pfau
2015. Sign Language Typology: The Contribution of Rural Sign Languages. Annual Review of Linguistics 1:1  pp. 265 ff. DOI logo
Horton, Laura
2022. Lexical overlap in young sign languages from Guatemala. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 7:1 DOI logo
Hou, Lynn & Richard P. Meier
2018. The morphology of first-person object forms of directional verbs in ASL. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 3:1 DOI logo
Kimmelman, Vadim, Vanja de Lint, Connie de Vos, Marloes Oomen, Roland Pfau, Lianne Vink & Enoch O. Aboh
2019. Argument Structure of Classifier Predicates: Canonical and Non-canonical Mappings in Four Sign Languages. Open Linguistics 5:1  pp. 332 ff. DOI logo
Kockelman, Paul, N. J. Enfield & Jack Sidnell
2014. Process and formation. In The Cambridge Handbook of Linguistic Anthropology,  pp. 183 ff. DOI logo
Lepeut, Alysson & Inez Beukeleers
2022. On the semiotic diversity of language. Belgian Journal of Linguistics 36  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Levinson, Stephen C.
2014. Language evolution. In The Cambridge Handbook of Linguistic Anthropology,  pp. 309 ff. DOI logo
Levinson, Stephen C. & Judith Holler
2014. The origin of human multi-modal communication. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 369:1651  pp. 20130302 ff. DOI logo
Lutzenberger, Hannah, Connie de Vos, Onno Crasborn & Paula Fikkert
2021. Formal variation in the Kata Kolok lexicon. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 6:1 DOI logo
Lutzenberger, Hannah, Katie Mudd, Rose Stamp & Adam Charles Schembri
2023. The social structure of signing communities and lexical variation: A cross-linguistic comparison of three unrelated sign languages. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 8:1 DOI logo
Lutzenberger, Hannah, Roland Pfau & Connie de Vos
2022. Emergence or Grammaticalization? The Case of Negation in Kata Kolok. Languages 7:1  pp. 23 ff. DOI logo
Pfau, Roland, Martin Salzmann & Markus Steinbach
2018. The syntax of sign language agreement: Common ingredients, but unusual recipe. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 3:1 DOI logo
Reagan, Timothy
2019. Sign Language and the DEAF-WORLD: ‘Listening without hearing’. In Linguistic Legitimacy and Social Justice,  pp. 135 ff. DOI logo
Schembri, Adam, Kearsy Cormier & Jordan Fenlon
2018. Indicating verbs as typologically unique constructions: Reconsidering verb ‘agreement’ in sign languages. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 3:1 DOI logo
Silva, Anderson Almeida da
2021. Uma proposta de categorização das apontações laterais em Libras. Cadernos de Linguística 2:4  pp. e465 ff. DOI logo
Tkachman, Oksana
2022. Conflation of spatial reference frames in deaf community sign languages. Linguistics Vanguard 8:s1  pp. 139 ff. DOI logo
Zeshan, Ulrike & Nick Palfreyman
2017. Sign Language Typology. In The Cambridge Handbook of Linguistic Typology,  pp. 178 ff. DOI logo
Zeshan, Ulrike & Nick Palfreyman
2020. Comparability of signed and spoken languages: Absolute and relative modality effects in cross-modal typology. Linguistic Typology 24:3  pp. 527 ff. DOI logo

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 14 march 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.