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E-raamat: Germanic Genitives

Edited by (FU Berlin), Edited by (FU Berlin), Edited by (FU Berlin)
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The papers in this volume focus on the dynamics of one specific cell in morphological paradigms – the genitive. The high amount of diachronic and synchronic variation in all Germanic languages makes the genitive a particularly interesting phenomenon since it allows us, for example, to examine comparable but slightly different diachronic pathways, the relation of synchronic and diachronic variation, and the interplay of linguistic levels (phonology, morphology, syntax, and semantics). The findings in this book enhance our understanding of the genitive not only by describing its properties, but also by discussing its demarcation from functional competitors and related grammatical items. Under-researched aspects of well-described languages as well as from lesser-known languages (Faroese, Frisian, Luxembourgish, Yiddish) are examined. The papers included are methodologically diverse and the topics covered range from morphology, syntax, and semantics to the influence of (normative) grammars and the perception and prestige of grammatical items.
Introductory overview
Genitives in Germanic
3(12)
Christian Zimmer
Horst J. Simon
Tanja Ackermann
Portraits of lesser studied languages
A new perspective on the Luxembourgish genitive
15(22)
Caroline Dohmer
Frisian genitives: From Old Frisian to the modern dialects
37(28)
Jarich Hoekstra
Genitive markers and their destinies
On the motivation of genitive-s omission in Contemporary German
65(26)
Christian Zimmer
From genitive suffix to linking element: A corpus study on the genesis and productivity of a new compounding pattern in (Early) New High German
91(24)
Kristin Kopf
The development of non-paradigmatic linking elements in Faroese and the decline of the genitive case
115(34)
Hjalmar P. Petersen
Renata Szczepaniak
`Genitives' in nominal configurations
The Genitive Rule and its background
149(40)
Peter Gallmann
From genitive inflection to possessive marker? The development of German possessive's with personal names
189(42)
Tanja Ackermann
Yiddish possessives as a case for genitive case
231(44)
Kerstin Hoge
Genitives and their functional competitors
Genitives and proper name compounds in German
275(26)
Barbara Schlucker
On the role of cases and possession in Germanic: A typological approach
301(24)
Kurt Braunmuller
Index 325