Gen. | D5 | 025 | Olguín-Martínez, Jesús | The areality of the consecutive pattern in Mesoamerican languages |
Gen. | D2 | 029 | Fonteyn, Lauren; Karsdorp, Folgert; Manjavacas, Enrique | From ecological to lexical diversity: measuring vocabulary richness in historical corpora |
Gen. | D5 | 030 | Salaberri, Iker | Towards an account of the emergence, evolution and variability of emphatic negative coordination in Indo-European, part 2: A diachronic perspective |
Gen. | D1 | 031 | Shamseddinov, Abdurahman; Authier, Gilles | Contact-driven grammaticalization and drift of new terminal tenses from go-periphrasis in Azeri and Kryz (East Caucasian) |
Gen. | D2 | 032 | Bonmann, Svenja; Hill, Eugen; Korobzow, Natalie; Fries, Simon; Günther, Laura | Towards a New Reconstruction of the Proto-Yeniseian Sound System |
Gen. | D5 | 035 | Schützler, Ole | Third-person verb inflection in Shakespeare’s dramatic texts |
Gen. | D4 | 036 | Poletto, Cecilia; Larrivèe, Pierre; Pinzin, Francesco; Goux, Mathieu | Learning how to count – a treebank analysis of V2 word order in two Medieval Romance languages through time |
Gen. | D1 | 037 | Persohn, Bastian | When ‘still’ comes to signal a near past |
Gen. | D3 | 038 | Pan, Tao | ille ego and Recognitional Use of Demonstratives |
Gen. | D5 | 039 | Long, Haiping | Separate clause source and initial-to-medial pathway: Formation of Chinese epistemic adverbial and sentence connective chéngrán |
Gen. | D5 | 040 | Bronikowska, Renata | Middle Polish adverb-like predicates ending in -a compared to other adverbial and adjectival predicates – corpus-based approach |
Gen. | D5 | 041 | van Dam, Kellen Parker | Internal subgrouping of Northern Naga based on Bayesian phylogenetic analysis |
Gen. | D1 | 043 | Maiden, Martin | A morphological freeloader: Ibero-Romance caber |
Gen. | D5 | 048 | Rodríguez-Somolinos, Amalia | From inference to hearsay: the development of the French parentheticals à ce qu’il paraît, comme il paraît, il paraît, paraît-il |
Gen. | D4 | 050 | Rosenkvist, Henrik | Structural ambiguity and reanalysis – the case of Swedish fortsatt |
Gen. | D2 | 051 | Kisiel, Anna; Sobotka, Piotr | The functional interpretation of semantic and syntactic shifts in the domain of North Slavic “conversive” preposition-pronominal constructions |
Gen. | D1 | 052 | Börjars, Kersti; Vincent, Nigel | Auxiliary, light or lexical: the history of GO verbs |
Gen. | D1 | 055 | Mofidi, Roohollah | Competition in the aspect-mood domain: The standardization of a diachronic data set of New Persian |
Gen. | D2 | 056 | Huang, Yang | The Expression of Negation in Sabde Minyag |
Gen. | D2 | 057 | Hualde, José Ignacio | The diachrony of Basque accentuation: comparative method and internal reconstruction |
Gen. | D1 | 058 | Manterola, Julen; Céline, Mounole; Hualde, José Ignacio | The history of the Basque pronoun zuek ‘you.all’ in relation to similar Romance developments |
Gen. | D1 | 059 | Conradie, Jac | The Afrikaans auxiliary het 'have' from clitic to desinence |
Gen. | D1 | 061 | Aldridge, Edith | Reconstructing Proto-Austronesian Interrogative Pronouns |
Gen. | D3 | 063 | Currie, Oliver | The emergence of a Welsh biblical literary standard and the evidence of early modern manuscript sermons |
Gen. | D2 | 065 | Idiatov, Dmitry | Vowel reduction to /i/ in functional morphemes in Northern Sub-Saharan Africa |
Gen. | D2 | 066 | Ongenae, Tim | Towards a Diachronic Account of P-lability in Latin: The Semantic Extension of the Active Intransitive as an Anticausative Strategy in Latin |
Gen. | D1 | 067 | Hamans, Camiel | A revolution in the history of affix-formation |
Gen. | D1 | 068 | Dedvukaj, Lindon | Reanalyzing the Historical Constructions of Albanian Prepositions |
Gen. | D5 | 069 | Pacchiarotti, Sara; Chousou-Polydouri, Natalia; Donzo, Jean-Pierre; Kouarata, Guy; Maselli, Lorenzo; Bostoen, Koen | Uncovering lost paths in the Congo rainforest: A new, comprehensive phylogeny of West-Coastal and Central-Western Bantu |
Gen. | D2 | 070 | Šefčík, Ondřej | Bartholomae’s law revisited and remodelled |
Gen. | D2 | 072 | Bru, Mathilde | ‘So wrong that not even Menander uses it!’: the Atticist lexicographers on the Ancient Greek dialects |
Gen. | D3 | 073 | Munteanu, Andrei | Automating Comparative Reconstructions: Case Study in Austronesian and Ongan |
Gen. | D3 | 074 | Mirelman, Sam | Translation as Royal Legitimation: The Concepts of “Source” and “Target” Language in Sumerian-Akkadian Royal Inscriptions from the Old Babylonian Period (2000–1600 BC) |
Gen. | D3 | 075 | Bogdanowska-Jakubowska, Ewa; Bogdanowska, Nika | Changes in the Polish address practices after the Second World War |
Gen. | D2 | 077 | Västerdal, Ida | A case of Verschärfung in the Swedish dialect from Stora Rågö in Estonia |
Gen. | D4 | 078 | Wolfe, Sam | Parallel Phases in the History of French |
Gen. | D3 | 079 | Roth, Kerstin | Rhetoric, stylistic and argumentative strategies of German language female authors in the 17th century |
Gen. | D3 | 080 | Bloom, Barthe | Early New High German preposed adverbial clauses: integration and discourse functions |
Gen. | D4 | 084 | Jensen, Eva Skafte; Schack, Jørgen | Adverbs ending in -(l)ig ‘-ly’ and -(l)igt ‘-ly’ in Danish |
Gen. | D1 | 086 | Alfieri, Luca; Pozza, Marianna | Adjectival typology in four ancient Indo-European languages |
Gen. | D1 | 088 | Saiz Sánchez, Marta | The periodization of the Pre-Classical French through the study of nennil and non in grammars, remarks and treatises (15th–17th centuries) |
Gen. | D5 | 089 | Kayenbergh, Juliette; De Smet, Hendrik | Just a bystander? Semantic change in the English simple tenses |
Gen. | D3 | 090 | Westergaard, Lennart; Boye, Kasper | On semantic change in grammaticalization: Why it is never metaphoric |
Gen. | D4 | 091 | Gobena, Wakweya | Predicative possession in the languages of the Ethiopian area |
Gen. | D5 | 092 | Westergaard, Lennart | The long and winding road of the Danish evidential vel – from epistemic modality via concessivity to evidentiality |
Gen. | D3 | 093 | Boye, Kasper | Grammaticalization as conventionalization of discursively secondary status: Isolating what is unique to grammaticalization, and deconstructing the lexical-grammatical continuum |
Gen. | D2 | 094 | Huback, Ana Paula; Fontes Martins, Raquel Márcia | R Deletion in Brazilian Portuguese: Diachronic and Synchronic Evidence for Lexical Diffusion |
Gen. | D2 | 096 | Shcherbakova, Olena; Evers, Stephanie; Gray, Russell; Greenhill, Simon | Diachronic pathways of definite articles distribution |
Gen. | D2 | 097 | Chankova, Yana | As Syntax Interfaces with Information Structure: Old Icelandic Non-Canonical Scrambled Orders |
Gen. | D2 | 098 | Friedman, Victor | Obscenity as a Window into Slavic Linguistic History |
Gen. | D4 | 099 | Mendoza, Imke; Sonnenhauser, Barbara; Wiemer, Björn | Anchoring patterns in emerging complement clauses in Slavic |
Gen. | D4 | 100 | Inglese, Guglielmo; Cornillie, Bert; Ferrarotti, Lorenzo; Goria, Eugenio; Mazzola, Giulia | The anticausative alternation in Italian and Spanish: a historical corpus-based perspective |
Gen. | D3 | 102 | Ricquier, Birgit; Demolin, Didier | The Chronicle of Lingbe, an Extinct Bantu Language of East Congo |
Gen. | D3 | 103 | Schäfer, Lea | Dramatic texts as a source of stigmatization from below |
Gen. | D2 | 104 | Bossuyt, Tom; Daveloose, Eline | Divergence and contact in Cappadocian concessive conditionals |
Gen. | D4 | 105 | Esher, Louise | Gascon u-perfects and the analogical foregrounding of inflectional class |
Gen. | D5 | 108 | Iezzi, Luca | The role of French in the Johnsons’ correspondence |
Gen. | D3 | 109 | Salvesen, Christine Meklenborg | Tracing the origins of resumption in Swedish |
Gen. | D1 | 111 | Visser, Lourens | Adverbs of degree from Old to Early New High German |
Gen. | D4 | 112 | Brunner, Thomas | The ordering of matrix clauses and subordinate causal clauses in the Old Bailey Corpus 1720–1913 |
Gen. | D1 | 113 | Feltgen, Quentin | The shape of grammaticalization: matching the bridging context scenario with patterns of frequency use |
Gen. | D2 | 114 | Farina, Andrea; Short, William Michael; McGillivray, Barbara | WordNets and Treebanks. A study on the semantic field SEA in Latin and Ancient Greek classical prose |
Gen. | D2 | 115 | Stratton, James | Where did wer go? Searching for s-curves in lexical change from Old English to Middle English |
Gen. | D1 | 116 | Leddy-Cecere, Thomas | The PRESENTATIVE > DEMONSTRATIVE Grammaticalization Pathway in Arabic |
Gen. | D4 | 118 | Gosemann, Laura | Syntactic change and DLM in German: a corpus study |
Gen. | D4 | 121 | de Vos, Machteld | Spread the German new(s): third-person reflexive zich in 17th-century Dutch newspapers |
Gen. | D2 | 122 | Concu, Valentina | The use of “thank” and “to thank” in Old Saxon and Old High German |
Gen. | D5 | 123 | Sternefeld, Leah | What is ke and if so how many? – The Persian modal particle ke and its diachronic development |
Gen. | D1 | 124 | Kümmel, Martin Joachim; Kölligan, Daniel; Wiemer, Björn | The development of future-referring constructions (in Indo-European languages) |
Gen. | D2 | 125 | Schulte, Michael | A re-assessment of Early Runic Metrics |
Gen. | D2 | 126 | Eyþórsson, Þórhallur; Sigurðardóttir, Sigríður Sæunn | Micro-level conflict in the productivity of anticausativization strategies: Evidence from the history of Icelandic |
Gen. | D1 | 127 | Coenen, Pascal | The totalizing function of the Vedic particle cid |
Gen. | D1 | 128 | Pleyer, Michael; Neels, Jakob; Hartmann, Stefan | The Interaction of the Cognitive and Community Level in Language Evolution: A Usage-Based Perspective |
Gen. | D1 | 129 | Fromm, Nathalie | The development of number strengthening in German declensional classes. A diachronic-dialectal corpus study |
Gen. | D2 | 133 | Tan, Tamisha L. | The Lost Cause: Inflection Class in Amarasi |
Gen. | D1 | 135 | Janda, Richard; Joseph, Brian | West Germanic 2.sg. -st Revisited: The Role of Supervescence |
Gen. | D3 | 137 | Daveloose, Eline | From de to ke: functional transfer of a topic shift marker from Turkish to Cappadocian Greek |
Gen. | D5 | 138 | Rosemeyer, Malte; De Pascale, Stefano; Mazzola, Giulia | A computational approach to detect discourse traditions and register differences: a case study on historical French |
Gen. | D2 | 142 | Voigtmann, Sophia | Where do all the NPs go? – A corpus linguistic study on NP extraposition in German scientific writing from 1650 to 1900 |
Gen. | D2 | 143 | Tikhonov, Aleksej; Meyer, Roland; Razguliaeva, Mariia; Funk, Ekaterina | Pronoun history and infromation structure in 18th century non-religious Russian texts |
Gen. | D2 | 144 | Jonjić, Darja; Guzmán Naranjo, Matías; Wichmann, Søren | Isoglosses and distributions of features – Analyses of the Dialectological Atlas of the Russian Language |
Gen. | D5 | 145 | Assenzi, Lucia | Hearsay in Historical German Newspapers (1740–1840) |
Gen. | D5 | 146 | Burns, Roslyn | Towards Quantifying Social Behavior in Language Contact |
Gen. | D1 | 147 | Sims-Williams, Helen | Rehabilitating ‘non-proportional’ analogy |
Gen. | D1 | 148 | Espíndola Moschner, Silvina; Rosemeyer, Malte | Aspectual uses of saber + infinitive in South American Spanish varieties: a corpus-based study |
Gen. | D3 | 150 | Flaksman, Maria | Lost in translation. Onomatopoeic words in Old English glosses |
Gen. | D1 | 152 | Ariztimuño, Borja; Salaberri, Iker | A new perspective on the evolution of mood and negation markers in Proto-Basque |
Gen. | D2 | 153 | Chen, Zhaoyang | Verified Computational Rule-based Historical Phonology in Standard ML and Isabelle/HOL |
Gen. | D3 | 154 | di Bartolo, Giuseppina | Where and How? Request verb constructions in Ancient Greek |
Gen. | D2 | 157 | Hofmann, Klaus | Evolving rhythms: A quantitative assessment of rhythmic alternation in the history of English |
Gen. | D2 | 158 | Pierce, Marc | The History of /pf/ in New Braunfels German: Another Case of Rule Inversion? |
Gen. | D5 | 164 | Zeng, Xiuwei | Ditransitive GIVE-construction in three Hainan Min-Chinese: Interaction between inherited structures and contact-induced changes |
Gen. | D1 | 165 | Tresoldi, Tiago; de Carvalho, Fernando Orphão; Ferraz Gerardi, Fabrício; de Souza Barreto, Bruno | A Phylogenetic Study of the Cariban Family: Combining Linguistic and Archaeological Data |
Gen. | D5 | 166 | Pache, Matthias | Evidence for a Chibcha-Jê connection |
Gen. | D3 | 167 | Markopoulos, Theodore | Epistemic modality out of 'playfulness': Modern Greek pezi |
Gen. | D5 | 168 | Franco, Karlien | Explaining the speed of lexical change in historical Dutch |
Gen. | D2 | 169 | Rahman, Syed Shahrier; Banerjee, Mithun | The diachronic study of Bangla case marking system |
Gen. | D4 | 170 | Reetz, Malika | German V2-Argument Clauses from a Diachronic Perspective |
Gen. | D4 | 171 | Dücker, Lisa | Semantic factors influencing the change in position of German adnominal genitives in the 17th to 19th centuries |
Gen. | D4 | 173 | Cennamo, Michela | Existential HAVE in Late Latin: insights on its diachrony in the passage to Romance |
Gen. | D5 | 174 | Nieder, Jessica; Tomaschek, Fabian | Classifying the origin of Maltese nouns – A cross-language approach employing phonotactics |
Gen. | D2 | 175 | Dömötör, Adrienne | From direct quotation to a chain of extended quotations: the history of Hungarian úgymond ’so to speak’ |
Gen. | D2 | 176 | Torres-Latorre, Aina | Synthetic or analytical: factors which explain the formal variation of future and conditional in Old Catalan |
Gen. | D5 | 178 | Billing, Oscar; Elgh, Erik | Computational Anatolian phylogeny using maximum parsimony |
Gen. | D2 | 180 | Darling, Mark; Meelen, Marieke; Willis, David | The Diachrony of Person-Number Marking of Subjects in Celtic |
Gen. | D2 | 181 | Reinöhl, Uta; Culhane, Kirsten; Peck, Naomi; Bouaziz, Wifek | The loss of word-initial consonants in Kera’a – A challenge for phonological theory |
Gen. | D5 | 183 | Elter, W. Juliane | Anglo-Scandinavian Contact Influence on Verbs Entering the Causative Alternation |
Gen. | D1 | 184 | Mailhammer, Robert; Harvey, Mark | The Comparative Method on a shoestring: Evaluating chance vs inheritance with a limited database |
Gen. | D1 | 186 | Kaye, Steven; Maisak, Timur | ‘Old presents’ and the layered history of the Andi verb |
Gen. | D2 | 187 | Meyer, Robin | Quasi-Suffixaufnahme in Classical Armenian |
Gen. | D2 | 188 | Honeybone, Patrick | Can fortis stops spirantise without aspiration? |
Gen. | D2 | 189 | Pronk, Tijmen | Tonogenesis in Baltic and Slavic languages |
Gen. | D5 | 190 | Reinöhl, Uta; Ellison, T. Mark | Metaphor, Overtness and Word Order Routinization |
Gen. | D5 | 191 | Bauer, Brigitte L. M. | Complexity in counting systems: early systems vs. modern numerical ones |
Gen. | D5 | 192 | Mous, Maarten | The classification of South Cushitic |
Gen. | D2 | 194 | Egedi, Barbara | Demonstrative modifiers in Middle Hungarian: a complex picture of renewal |
Gen. | D2 | 196 | Round, Erich; Beniamine, Sacha; Esher, Louise | The natural stability of ‘unnatural’ morphology |
Gen. | D2 | 197 | Kozhanov, Kirill | Diachronic stability of case functions: oblique in Romani dialects |
Gen. | D3 | 198 | Lindgren, Freja; Tresoldi, Tiago | The Charition Mime: Decoding the “Indian Language” through Typology and Entropy |
Gen. | D5 | 199 | Herce, Borja; Cathcart, Chundra | Stem shortening in Romance verbs: the 'S morphome' at the intersection of token frequency and paradigmatic structure |
Gen. | D5 | 200 | Hirvonen, Johannes | Contact-induced change of Negative Indefinites – the case of Meadow Mari |
Gen. | D1 | 203 | Björnsdóttir, Sigríður; Gotthard, Lisa; Riegger, Chiara; Walkden, George | The rise of raising in Early Modern English |
Gen. | D1 | 206 | Petré, Peter | Conservative pressure on the progressive: the passival |
Gen. | D5 | 207 | Sapp, Christopher; Sprouse, Rex; Evans, Elliott | Another look at Noun-Genitive vs. Genitive-Noun in Early New High German |
Gen. | D1 | 208 | Cluyse, Brian; Somers, Joren; Barðdal, Jóhanna | Latin placēre as an alternating Dat-Nom/Nom-Dat verb: A radically new analysis |
Gen. | D1 | 211 | Meisterernst, Barbara | The diachronic development of future markers in Chinese |
Gen. | D2 | 212 | Russell, Kerri | Properties of Complex Compounds in Old Japanese |
Gen. | D1 | 213 | Elens, Wannes; Somers, Joren; Barðdal, Jóhanna | The Alternating Behavior of ‘Like’ in Old Norse-Icelandic: Facts or Fiction |
Gen. | D1 | 214 | Gotthard, Lisa | The rise of do-support during Scots anglicisation: Insights from the Parsed Corpus of Scottish Correspondence |
Gen. | D5 | 215 | Hernáiz, Rodrigo | Exploring language variation and change in the distant past |
Gen. | D1 | 217 | Olivier, Marc | When change fails: evidence from French |
Gen. | D4 | 219 | Ebert, Christian; Cathcart, Chundra; Bickel, Balthasar; Widmer, Paul | Usage-based evolutionary models reveal context-specific word order change in Indo-European |
Gen. | D2 | 220 | Sigurðardóttir, Sigríður Sæunn | From complex to simple prepositions in Icelandic: The case of á bak við to bakvið ‘behind’ |
Gen. | D2 | 221 | Wichers Schreur, Jesse | Differential Place Marking and the reconstruction of the Proto-Nakh system of spatial cases |
Gen. | D4 | 222 | Gisborne, Nikolas; Truswell, Robert | Contact and the origins of headed wh-relatives in Hungarian |
Gen. | D2 | 225 | Lionnet, Florian | Areal alignment and the loss of ATR harmony in Riverine Bua languages (Chad) |
Gen. | D4 | 227 | Gibson, Hannah; Hamad, Yussuf; Marten, Lutz; Poeta, Teresa; Taji, Julius | Morphosyntactic variation in Swahili: Tracing descriptions past and present |
Gen. | D1 | 228 | Gugán, Katalin | Outliers in variation and change: atypical users of the variants of negation in Old and Middle Hungarian |
Gen. | D5 | 230 | Brown, Braden; Grollemund, Rebecca | Towards a new classification of Western Bantu languages using non-lexical data |
Gen. | D5 | 232 | Gunnink, Hilde; Bostoen, Koen; Chousou-Polydouri, Natalia | An evolutionary loner in Southern African Bantu: The classification of Yeyi |
Gen. | D4 | 233 | McCarley, Gemma | Diachronic Null Subject Use across Latin American Spanish: Comparing Corpora |
Gen. | D1 | 234 | Gfeller, Kim | Persistence and Change of Colexifications in Indo-European |
Gen. | D2 | 235 | Strauss, Silvie | Paradigmatic redundancy in the complement system of Basque |
Gen. | D3 | 236 | Potochnik, Thomas | Doing Conversation Analysis in Latin: The Case of Hedging |
Gen. | D5 | 237 | Capano, Marta | It Ain't Over till It's Over. Bilingualism and language decay in Sicilian inscriptions |
Gen. | D4 | 238 | Holopainen, Sampsa | The emergence of word-initial voiced stops in Proto-Hungarian |
Gen. | D3 | 239 | Halfmann, Jakob; Korobzow, Natalie | The Evolution of Spatial Orientation Systems in Mayan and Nuristani |
Gen. | D1 | 240 | Gopal, Deepthi; Kauhanen, Henri; Kitching, Christopher; Galla, Tobias; Bermudez-Otero, Ricardo | Correlations between linguistic features are reflected in their geospatial patterning: Introducing the geo-typological Sandwich Conjecture |
Gen. | D3 | 242 | Verkerk, Annemarie; Gray, Russell; Haynie, Hannah | Exploiting phylogenetic modeling to uncover directionality in the emergence of universals |
Gen. | D1 | 243 | Juge, Matthew | Periphrastic perfects reflect the lexical semantic distinctions of their auxiliaries |
Gen. | D2 | 244 | Auderset, Sandra | Is tone change more rapid and irregular than segmental change? – A Mixtec case study |
Gen. | D2 | 245 | Dockum, Rikker; Lu, Ark Qiyou | Beyond the paradigm: Change and expansion in Thai pronominal reference |
Gen. | D3 | 247 | Gelumbeckaitė, Jolanta; Eide, Øyvind; Drach, Mortimer; Chiarcos, Christian; Ionov, Max | The Postil Time Machine: “God help those who have begun writing down these books in Lithuanian” |
Gen. | D2 | 248 | Ritt, Nikolaus; Hofmann, Klaus | ‘Chained to the rhythm’: Using agent-based simulation to model the evolution of stress pattern diversity in English |
Gen. | D4 | 251 | Hakimov, Nikolay | Fall of the jers: A multi-factorial analysis of the sound change progression in the Old Novgorodian birchbark texts |
Gen. | D2 | 253 | Ulman, Vít | Genesis of the Japanese Compound Particles |
Gen. | D4 | 254 | Igartua, Iván | Exploring the sources of animacy distinctions |
Gen. | D2 | 255 | Boyeldieu, Pascal | Tone split and tone replacement: toward the three-tone system of the ‘Western’ SBB Languages (Central Sudanic, Central Africa) |
Gen. | D2 | 258 | Litvinova, Lora | Reconstructing the Kugama tone system |
Gen. | D4 | 261 | Klævik-Pettersen, Espen | VSO orders in the Egeriae and Antonini Placentini itineraria; new evidence for the evolution towards Old Romance inversion systems |
Gen. | D2 | 263 | Santamaria, Andrea | The Greek suffix -θ- and the Caland System |
Gen. | D5 | 264 | Cattafi, Eleonora | Continuative relative clauses in Greek documentary papyri |
Gen. | D1 | 265 | Mounole, Céline; Manterola, Julen | From distal demonstrative to resultative marker (through definite article): evidence from Basque |
Gen. | D5 | 266 | Das, Patrick | Areality through Migration: Investigating the Structure of Numeral Classifiers in the Eastern Himalayan Region Reveals Historic Contact Events |
Gen. | D2 | 267 | Serangeli, Matilde | Rumpled chicken come home to roost. From [TO CARD – IMPURITY] to [TO PURIFY/HEAL (someone) – from DISEASE]. Evidence from Anatolian, Ancient Greek, and Old Indic |
Gen. | D2 | 268 | Rapold, Christian | Secondary lateral obstruents in South Cushitic and their significance for the linguistic history of East Africa |
Gen. | D5 | 269 | Wieczorek, Aleksandra | Discontinuous noun phrases containing adjective or adjective-like modifiers in Middle Polish texts. Preliminary research conducted on an experimental dependency treebank |
Gen. | D1 | 270 | Juge, Matthew | The dominant-recessive hypothesis does not account for overlapping suppletion |
Gen. | D4 | 272 | Pompei, Anna | The case of Italian seguente: an European instance of current change from verb to demonstrative? |
Gen. | D2 | 273 | Caso, Anabelle; Hale, Mark | Secondary predication in metrical texts: syntax-prosody mapping in ancient Indo-European languages |
Gen. | D4 | 274 | Dockum, Rikker; Wang, Qingyun | Quality vs. quantity: Contrast maintenance and tradeoff in Southwestern Tai vowels |
Gen. | D4 | 275 | Pounder, Amanda | Morphologization of Phonological Processes as Integration |
Gen. | D4 | 278 | Benvenuto, Maria Carmela; Bichlmeier, Harald | The expression of predicative possession in Avestan |
Gen. | D3 | 279 | Dinu, Liviu P.; Cristea, Alina Maria; Dinu, Anca; Georgescu, Simona; Uban, Ana Sabina; Zoicas, Laurentiu | Computational approaches for Romance related words discrimination |
Gen. | D1 | 280 | Paterson, Rebecca | Emergence of alternate argument alignment patterns in Northwest Kainji |
Gen. | D1 | 281 | Tieku, Enock Appiah | Drivers of Diversity in the Construal of Quantity in the World’s Languages |
Gen. | D4 | 282 | Paterson, Hugh | Proto-Malayo-Polynesian: Some Phonetic Evidence for *l |
Gen. | D2 | 283 | Riad, Tomas | Hypotheses and scenarios in North Germanic tonogenesis |
Gen. | D5 | 286 | Sitchinava, Dmitri | A panchronic corpus of Old East Slavic and Russian: bringing together Slavic historical and modern corpus resources |
Gen. | D5 | 290 | Swanenvleugel, Cid | The Sardinian substrate lexicon and its Mediterranean comparanda |
Plen. | D1 | PL1 | Kiparsky, Paul | The word-order cycle |
Plen. | D2 | PL2 | Lahiri, Aditi | Phonological grammars: Pertinacious constraints on change |
Plen. | D3 | PL3 | Marten, Lutz | Historical linguistics and ubuntu translanguaging: Towards a model of multilingualism, language change and linguistic convergence in the Bantu Linguistic Area |
Plen. | D3 | PL4 | Engelberg, Stefan; Klosa-Kückelhaus, Annette; Meyer, Peter; Ochs, Samira; Rüdiger, Jan Oliver; Wolfer, Sascha | Empirical approaches to the dynamics of the lexicon – internet-based tools and research platforms at the Leibniz-Institute for the German Language |
Plen. | D4 | PL5 | van Kemenade, Ans | Word order change, architecture and interfaces: Evidence from V2 word orders and their loss in the history of English |
Plen. | D4 | PL6 | Vincent, Nigel; Walkden, George; Fried, Mirjam; Boye, Kasper; Deo, Ashwini | Linguistic models (with a focus on morphosyntactic change) |
Plen. | D5 | PL7 | Smith, John Charles | Fifty years of ICHL, 1973–2023 |
W01 | D1 | W01 | Robbeets, Martine | [Workshop:] From climate change to language change |
W01 | D1 | W01.1 | Robbeets, Martine | [Introduction:] From climate change to language change |
W01 | D1 | W01.2 | Berge, Anne | Prehistoric climate changes and their effects on the development of the Eskaleut languages |
W01 | D1 | W01.3 | Knapen, Martijn | Seals and sea ice: the (possible) climatic background of Amuric influence on Ainu |
W01 | D1 | W01.4 | Miyamoto, Kazuo | Spread of Proto-Japanese from Korean Peninsula to Japanese Archipelago influenced by natural environment change |
W01 | D1 | W01.5 | Bradley, David | Climate change and the dispersal of Proto-Tibeto-Burman |
W01 | D1 | W01.6 | Deng, Bingcong | Climate change reflected in early Sino-Tibetan borrowings for crops and animals |
W01 | D1 | W01.7 | Sidwell, Paul | Austroasiatic dispersal: sea levels and estuarine environments in late Neolithic Mainland SEAsia |
W01 | D1 | W01.8 | Heggarty, Paul | Languages, ecology and climate change: Worldwide perspectives and the test-case of the Andes |
W01 | D1 | W01.9 | Joseph, Brian | (Im)mobility, climate, and language: Towards a geoanthropology of the Balkans |
W01 | D1 | W01.10 | Hudson, Mark | Risk, resilience and the ecology of farming/language dispersals |
W02 | D2 | W02 | Drinka, Bridget; Nevalainen, Terttu; Rutten, Gijsbert | [Workshop:] Macro-level social motivations for language change: Contact, migration, and globalization |
W02 | D2 | W02.1 | Drinka, Bridget; Nevalainen, Terttu; Rutten, Gijsbert | [Introduction:] Macro-level social motivations for language change: Contact, migration, and globalization |
W02 | D2 | W02.2 | Nichols, Johanna | Reconstructing prehistoric sociolinguistics from modern grammatical evidence |
W02 | D2 | W02.3 | Andersen, Henning | Macro-changes at the dawn of history: The Slavic Expansion |
W02 | D2 | W02.4 | Nijs, Julie; Van de Velde, Freek; Cuyckens, Huybert | An information-theoretic approach to morphological and syntactic complexity in Dutch, English and German |
W02 | D2 | W02.5 | Sobolev, Andrey N. | Contact as a major Motivation for Linguistic Change in the History of Balkan Slavic |
W02 | D2 | W02.6 | Gvozdanović, Jadranka | Ideology, language choice and language change |
W02 | D2 | W02.7 | Sowada, Lena | Language use in Alsace from 1914 to 1919. Private texts between official legislation and individual identity construction |
W02 | D2 | W02.8 | Enrique-Arias, Andrés | Political influence as a factor in morphosyntactic variation: demonstratives este and aqueste in medieval Aragonese |
W02 | D2 | W02.9 | Mesthrie, Rajend | Macro sociohistorical forces, contact, convergence and the development of modern linguistic areas: insights from South Africa |
W02 | D2 | W02.10 | Salmons, Joseph | Verticalization and the historical sociolinguistics of language maintenance |
W03 | D4 | W03 | Degaetano-Ortlieb, Stefania; Fonteyn, Lauren; Krielke, Marie-Pauline; Teich, Elke | [Workshop:] Computational models of diachronic language change |
W03 | D4 | W03.1 | Al-Laith, Ali; Nielsen Degn, Kirstine; Sandford Pedersen, Bolette; Hershcovich, Daniel; Bjerring-Hansen, Jens | A Diachronic Analysis of Using Sentiment Words in Scandinavian Literary Texts from 1870–1900 |
W03 | D4 | W03.2 | Jenset, Gard; Landwehr, Isabell; McGillivray, Barbara; Degaetano-Ortlieb, Stefania | Computational linguistic modelling of the temporal dynamics of scientific communication: a quantitative corpus study on the journal Nature |
W03 | D4 | W03.3 | Maurer, Maximilian; Jenkins, Chris; Miletic, Filip; Schulte im Walde, Sabine | Quantifying Changes in English Noun Compound Productivity and Meaning |
W03 | D4 | W03.4 | Marr, Clayton | A computerized investigation of Albanian diachronic phonology |
W03 | D4 | W03.5 | Schlechtweg, Dominik | The LSCD Benchmark – A testbed for diachronic word meaning tasks |
W03 | D4 | W03.6 | Amaral, Patrícia; Hu, Hai; Tian, Zuoyu; Kübler, Sandra | Model evaluation for diachronic semantics: A view from Portuguese and Spanish |
W03 | D4 | W03.7 | Rönchen, Philipp; Billing, Oscar; Wiklund, Tilo | Using simulated data to evaluate models of Indo-European vocabulary evolution |
W03 | D4 | W03.8 | Dereza, Oksana; Fransen, Theodorus; McCrae, John P. | Evaluating historical word embeddings: strategies, challenges and pitfalls |
W04 | D2 | W04 | Zehentner, Eva; De Cesare, Ilaria | [Workshop:] Ambiguity (avoidance) as a factor in language change |
W04 | D2 | W04.1 | Smirnova, Elena | The role of ambiguity at different stages of diachronic change |
W04 | D2 | W04.2 | Ceuppens, Hilke; De Smet, Hendrik | Losing one’s senses: causes of obsolescence in lexical semantics |
W04 | D2 | W04.3 | Felser, Claudia | Structural ambiguity in language comprehension and production |
W04 | D2 | W04.4 | Wolfsgruber, Anne | Text-type specific conventions, subordinate environments and ambiguity (avoidance) in Medieval Spanish passive se-constructions |
W04 | D2 | W04.5 | Ritt, Nikolaus; Böhm, Irene | Sound changes tend to reduce morphotactic ambiguity |
W04 | D2 | W04.6 | Seržant, Ilja | Ambiguity avoidance and DOM |
W04 | D2 | W04.7 | Haspelmath, Martin | Ambiguity avoidance vs. expectation sensitivity as functional factors inlanguage change and language structures: Beyond argument marking |
W05 | D1 | W05 | Kölligan, Daniel; van Beek, Lucien | [Workshop:] Conceptual metaphors in a comparative and diachronic perspective |
W05 | D1 | W05.1 | van Beek, Lucien | Clouds or Arrows? Conceptual Metaphors and the Etymology of Homeric Greek kertoméō ‘to mock; taunt’ |
W05 | D1 | W05.2 | Bartolotta, Annamaria | The right-left conceptual mapping in a comparative and diachronic perspective |
W05 | D1 | W05.3 | Ginevra, Riccardo | Indo-European Poetics meets Cognitive Linguistics: an integrated approach to the comparative reconstruction of metaphoric and metonymic expressions |
W05 | D1 | W05.4 | Pompeo, Flavia | New meanings and old constructions: the conceptualization of ‘fearing’ and ‘protecting’ in Old Persian in comparison with other Indo-Iranian languages |
W05 | D1 | W05.5 | Roth, Theresa | Etymologies and emotions: Historical linguistics as a key to emotion categories |
W05 | D1 | W05.6 | Zampetta, Silvia; Biagetti, Erica; de Rossi, Nicolò; Giuliani, Martina; Zanchi, Chiara; Luraghi, Silvia | Calidum hoc est! Metaphors of HOT and COLD in Sanskrit, Ancient Greek, and Latin |
W05 | D1 | W05.7 | Kölligan, Daniel | Conceptual metaphors and etymology |
W06 | D4 | W06 | Grestenberger, Laura; Kamil, Iris; Reiter, Viktoria | [Workshop:] Categorizers in diachrony |
W06 | D4 | W06.0 | Grestenberger, Laura; Kamil, Iris; Reiter, Viktoria | [Introduction:] Categorizers in diachrony |
W06 | D4 | W06.1 | Calabrese, Andrea | Inflectional vocalic pieces in Latin verbal morphology: a synchronic and diachronic analysis |
W06 | D4 | W06.2 | Alfieri, Luca | On adjectivalizers in Rig-Vedic Sanskrit |
W06 | D4 | W06.3 | Hasselbach-Andee, Rebecca | One or All: The Development of Singulatives to Collectives in Semitic |
W06 | D4 | W06.4 | Tan, Tamisha | ‘Inalienable’ nominalisers across Meto |
W06 | D4 | W06.5 | Werner, Martina | When verbal complexes become nouns via infinitive nominalization: A parallel to the verbal domain or category-individual? |
W07 | D1 | W07 | Bjørn, Rasmus G.; Kilani, Marwan | [Workshop:] Interactions at the dawn of history: Methods and results in prehistoric contact linguistics |
W07 | D1 | W07.0 | Bjørn, Rasmus G.; Kilani, Marwan | [Introduction:] Interactions at the dawn of history: An introduction to the workshop |
W07 | D1 | W07.1 | Hansen, Magnus Pharao; Davletshin, Albert | Tracing borrowings in and out of proto-Nahuatl |
W07 | D1 | W07.2 | Bostoen, Koen; Maselli, Lorenzo; Pacchiarotti, Sara; Donzo, Jean-Pierre | Pre-Bantu substrate in Batwa Bantu languages of the Congo rainforest: A comparative study of nasal-oral stop cluster reduction |
W07 | D1 | W07.3 | Souag, Lameen | Prehistoric language contact in Berber |
W07 | D1 | W07.4 | Widmer, Paul; Sonnenhauser, Barbara | Linguistic convergence in the Ancient Near East |
W07 | D1 | W07.5 | Wier, Thomas | Language Contact in the Ancient Caucasus: the View from Kartvelian |
W07 | D1 | W07.6 | Yurayong, Chingduang; et al. | An archaeolinguistic approach to Indianisation and Sinicisation of languages in Eastern Eurasia |
W08 | D5 | W08 | Karim, Shuan Osman; Gholami, Saloumeh | [Workshop:] Filling in the diachronic gaps: the view of Old Iranian from the present |
W08 | D5 | W08.1 | Karim, Shuan Osman; Gholami, Saloumeh | [Introduction:] Filling in the diachronic gaps: the view of Old Iranian from the present |
W08 | D5 | W08.2 | Kreidl, Julian | Bactrian influence on local languages of Eastern Afghanistan |
W08 | D5 | W08.3 | Kim, Ronald I. | Steppe Iranian in the longue durée: contact, relative chronology, and internal reconstruction |
W08 | D5 | W08.4 | Mohammadirad, Masoud | Remarks on the category of copula in Gorani dialects |
W08 | D5 | W08.5 | Gholami, Saloumeh; Naghshbandi, Zaniar | Polyptoton for the purpose of emphasizing within Iranian languages |
W08 | D5 | W08.6 | Belelli, Sara | A historical-comparative glimpse on Laki dialects |
W08 | D5 | W08.7 | Suleymanov, Murad | Semantic Shift and Morphosyntactic Convergence of Tense-Aspect-Mood Categories in Alazan Persian |
W09 | D4 | W09 | Däbritz, Chris Lasse | [Workshop:] “Your birch-bark bag has something” – Grammaticalization and diachrony of locative, existential and possessive predication |
W09 | D4 | W09.1 | Däbritz, Chris Lasse | [Introduction:] “Your birch-bark bag has something” – Grammaticalization and diachrony of locative, existential and possessive predication |
W09 | D4 | W09.2 | Krasnoukhova, Olga; Shirtz, Shahar; Verkerk, Annemarie | Negated but similar – Negation in the domains of locative, existential, and possessive predication: The case of Indo-European |
W09 | D4 | W09.3 | Hengeveld, Kees | The development of locative, existential and possessive predication from a functional perspective |
W09 | D4 | W09.4 | Creissels, Denis | ‘Be/have’ verbs in historical perspective |
W09 | D4 | W09.5 | Camilleri, Maris | Parallels in the development from locative and existential predications to possessive structures in Arabic and Hebrew |
W10 | D4 | W10 | Baudel, Étienne; Jarosz, Aleksandra; Orlandi, Georg | [Workshop:] The (Pre)History of the Languages of Japan – Current issues and prospects |
W10 | D4 | W10.1 | Satō, Tomomi; Bugaeva, Anna | On stative/active intransitive split within tripartite alignment: A case of Kuril Ainu |
W10 | D4 | W10.2 | Shimabukuro, Moriyo | Debuccalization of *p in the Naha dialect of the Ryukyuan language |
W10 | D4 | W10.3 | Kinuhata, Tomohide | Reconstructing the Proto-Japonic demonstrative system |
W10 | D4 | W10.4 | Étienne, Baudel | Reconsidering the classification of Hachijō: A glimpse from historical phonology |
W10 | D4 | W10.5 | Majtczak, Tomasz | Old, Middle and New: Periodisation as a back-burnered topic in the diachronic research of Japanese |
W10 | D4 | W10.6 | Baudel, Étienne; Jarosz, Aleksandra; Orlandi, Georg | [Discussion:] The (Pre)History of the Languages of Japan – Current issues and prospects |
W11 | D5 | W11 | Auderset, Sandra; Dockum, Rikker; Gehrmann, Ryan | [Workshop:] The diachrony of tone: connecting the field |
W11 | D5 | W11.1 | Božović, Đorđe | Tone, stress and length interactions in Central Neo-Štokavian |
W11 | D5 | W11.2 | Lionnet, Florian | Accent and tone: the double origin of the Paicî tone system |
W11 | D5 | W11.3 | Kirby, James; Pittayaporn, Pittayawat | Tone and voicing in Cao Bằng Tai: implications for tonal evolution and change |
W11 | D5 | W11.4 | Arnold, Laura | Tone splits from vowel height in the Austronesian language of Raja Ampat |
W11 | D5 | W11.5 | Grimm, Nadine | A diachronic study of grammatical tone in northwestern Bantu |
W11 | D5 | W11.6 | Sæbø, Lilja; Grossman, Eitan | A Database of Tonogenetic Events (DTE) and what it can tell us about tonogenesis |
W11 | D5 | W11.7 | Perekhvalskaya, Elena; Vydrin, Valentin | Tonal density and its correlation with the types of tonal systems: Diachronic aspects |
W11 | D5 | W11.8 | Auderset, Sandra; Dockum, Rikker | [Discussion:] The diachrony of tone: connecting the field |
W12 | D2 | W12 | Orqueda, Verónica; González Saavedra, Berta | [Workshop:] From and Towards Demonstratives: Grammaticalization Processes and Beyond |
W12 | D2 | W12.1 | Mithun, Marianne | Further Pathways Towards Demonstratives |
W12 | D2 | W12.2 | Brosig, Benjamin; Dolgor, Guntsetseg | From spatial noun to medial demonstrative: the case of Khalkha Mongolian |
W12 | D2 | W12.3 | Ishiyama, Osamu | On the Development of Demonstratives into Personal Pronouns |
W12 | D2 | W12.4 | Stanković, Branimir | Types of contexts inducing the grammaticalization of demonstratives into definite articles – the case of a language without articles |
W12 | D2 | W12.5 | Næss, Åshild | Demonstratives taking over discourse: the grammaticalisation of deictic clitics in Äiwoo |
W12 | D2 | W12.6 | Neri, Sergio; de Vaan, Michiel | Origin and development of the Albanian demonstratives |
W12 | D2 | W12.7 | Luján, Eugenio; Ngomo Fernández, Esteban | From demonstratives to articles in the Celtic languages |
W12 | D2 | W12.8 | Orqueda, Verónica; Roland, Pooth | Latin ecce: arguments in favor of its development from a PIE demonstrative |
W13 | D4 | W13 | Cassarà, Alessia; Kaltenbach, Lena; Piccione, Mariapaola; Struik, Tara | [Workshop:] New methods for old languages: the comparability of data |
W13 | D4 | W13.0 | Cassarà, Alessia; Kaltenbach, Lena; Piccione, Mariapaola; Struik, Tara | [Introduction:] New methods for old languages: the comparability of data |
W13 | D4 | W13.1 | Figura, Lisa | Dative Experiencer Psych Verbs in (Old) French |
W13 | D4 | W13.2 | Trips, Carola; Rainsford, Tom | How to use Yang’s Principles to model acquisition in diachrony. The case of psych verbs |
W13 | D4 | W13.3 | Cassarà, Alessia; Stein, Achim; van Dijk, Chantal; Hopp, Holger | Marked vs. unmarked unaccusativity with alternating verbs: Linking diachronic and experimental data |
W13 | D4 | W13.4 | Kodner, Jordan | Language Acquisition and a Process-Centered View of Language Change |
W14 | D2 | W14 | Jäger, Gerhard; Forkel, Robert; List, Johann-Mattis | [Workshop:] Exploiting Standardized Cross-Linguistic Data in Historical Linguistics |
W14 | D2 | W14.1 | Jäger, Gerhard; Forkel, Robert; List, Johann-Mattis | [Introduction:] Exploiting Standardized Cross-Linguistic Data in Historical Linguistics |
W14 | D2 | W14.2 | Brigada Villa, Luca; Biagetti, Erica; Zanchi, Chiara; Luraghi, Silvia | Universal Dependency for Historical Languages (UD4HL): Towards Standardized Syntactic Data for Historical Languages |
W14 | D2 | W14.3 | Rzymski, Christoph | From Old Data to Fresh Phylogenies — A Linguistic Data Journey in the Times of CLDF |
W14 | D2 | W14.4 | Forkel, Robert; Greenhill, Simon | Phlorest: A Database of Consistent and Reusable Language Phylogenies |
W14 | D2 | W14.5 | Dellert, Johannes; Blaschke, Verena | Configurable Language-Specific Tokenization for CLDF Databases |
W14 | D2 | W14.6 | Blum, Frederic; List, Johann-Mattis | A computational evaluation of regularly recurring sound correspondences |
W14 | D2 | W14.7 | Mertner, Miri; Guzmán Naranjo, Matías | Exploring the Geographical Distribution of Missing Data Using Approximate Gaussian Processes |