{{t.titulosHerramientas.nube}}
{{t.titulosHerramientas.numeros}}
X
Abstract: The specialty of hybrid nouns is their different agreement according to certain features of the agreement target. They result from a conflict within in the gender assignment system. For example, the German noun Mädchen (semi-transparent diminutive for denotin
en
Abstract: Nouns referring to persons are “vehicles of our thoughts” (Hermanns 2012b: 62). As labels, they refer to social categories, thereby both reflecting social realities and preserving them at the same time. If social realities change, language usage changes as we
en
Abstract: In rural speech communities, when speakers refer to persons, their family of origin is omnipresent, not only by passing on the name of the family patriarch, but also in the serialization of surname and first name and in the grammatical structures of reference
en
Abstract: Speakers of Western Central German dialects frequently use the first person plural form of the possessive article unser with proper names (e.g. us Dietmar ‘our Dietmar’). But conditions of use are so far totally unclear. This paper focuses on form and use of
en
Abstract: In this paper, I study various manifestations of the grammatical category gender in addressrelated forms, above all in second person pronouns. It will be shown that its use is intricately connected with politeness – either because the gendered pronouns of add
en
Abstract: In numerous German dialects and in Luxembourgish women or girls are referred to in the neuter. This raises the question whether this is also the case for female animals. Based on data from the research project “Das Anna und ihr Hund – Weibliche Rufnamen im Ne
en
Abstract: In numerous German dialects and in Luxembourgish, female first names can take on both feminine and neuter gender agreement, thus leading to gender variation on a paradigmatical level and gender mismatches on a syntactical level. This is contradictory to canon
en
Abstract: The word formation pattern -[ __-i]N mask. in Alemannic mainly derives masculine agent nouns from verbs resulting in output semantics of ‘someone who notoriously acts in the manner of base verb’. I analyse the pattern as an instance of evaluative morphology e
en
Abstract: Data of the dialect research project “Das Anna und ihr Hund. Weibliche Rufnamen im Neutrum” indicate the important role of diminutive names in terms of the historical development and consolidation of the onymic neuter gender assignment. The focus in the prese
en
Abstract: In Swiss German dialects first names are commonly used with a preceding article. Historically, the function of these so-called onymic articles was to show the name’s case. They first arose when inflection of first names had been omitted and case was thus no l
en
Abstract: The Alemannic dialects in linguistic islands in Northern Italy have been undergoing strong changes since the second half of the 20th century. One of these changes concerns the assignment of gender with persons. Generalized neuter abolishes the coupling of gen
en
|
||
---|---|---|
|

{{criterio.prioridadCriterio}}. {{criterio.observaciones}} | ![]() |
![]() ![]() |
{{criterio.prioridadCriterio}}. {{criterio.observaciones}} | ![]() |
![]() ![]() |
{{criterio.prioridadCriterio}}. {{criterio.observaciones}} | ![]() |
![]() ![]() |
{{criterio.prioridadCriterio}}. {{criterio.observaciones}} | ![]() |
![]() ![]() |
{{criterio.prioridadCriterio}}. {{criterio.observaciones}} | ![]() |
![]() ![]() |