Bond, Oliver. 2026. Feature sharing in possessor agreement. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 11(1), 1–44. DOI: doi.org/10.16995/glo...
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Starke, Michal & Dalen, Lars Ingolf. 2026. Sub-extracting out of the Icelandic *ABA problem. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 11(1), 1–22. DOI: doi.org/10.16995/glo...
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Faust, Noam & Lampitelli, Nicola. 2026. Guttural syneresis in Tigrinya and Tigre. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 11(1), 1–31. DOI: doi.org/10.16995/glo...
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Porrini, Anna Teresa & Zanollo, Asya & D’Alesio, Veronica & Greco, Matteo. 2026. Processing standard and expletive negation: An eye-tracking study on Italian temporal and causal clauses. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 11(1), 1–25. DOI: doi.org/10.16995/glo...
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Patrianto, Hero & Chen, Victoria. 2026. When “passives” involve no A-movement: Rethinking Indonesian-type passives via East Javanese. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 11(1), 1–34.
DOI: doi.org/10.16995/glo...
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Hayyas, Asmaa. 2026. Animacy as a key to island amelioration: evidence from Saudi Arabic wh-questions. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 11(1), 1–36. DOI: doi.org/10.16995/glo...
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Liu, Yang. 2026. Backness Agreement in Consonant + Glide Onsets: Evidence from Mandarin. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 11(1), 1–33.
DOI: doi.org/10.16995/glo...
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Gorman, Kyle & Reiss, Charles. 2026. Get rich quick: Why kids don’t need Occam’s Razor. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 11(1), 1–31.
DOI: doi.org/10.16995/glo...
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Le, Khuyen N. & Bale, Alan & Barner, David. 2026. Object-mass nouns specify individuation lexically: Evidence from English and French. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 11(1), 1–25. DOI: doi.org/10.16995/glo...
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É. Kiss, Katalin. 2026. The role of opacity in the attrition of the Hungarian passive. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 11(1), 1–33. DOI: doi.org/10.16995/glo...
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Inalienable possessors that are internal to an NP headed by a possessed noun show evidence in support of FEATURE SHARING through agreement between a possessor controller and a possessed target in the ...
doi.org
Icelandic nominal declension show (acc = dat) ≠ gen syncretisms which go against Caha's (2009) cross-linguistic pattern of of acc > gen > dat and hence seemingly violate the *ABA generalisation ...
The Elements |I,U| of Element Theory (Kaye et al. 1985) surface as glides [j,w] when associated to positions other than the syllabic nucleus. Glide-like behavior is predicted to occur for the third el...
Natural language sometimes expresses negation in rather puzzlingly different forms. Different from Standard Negation (SN), Expletive Negation (EN) involves a negative marker that does not affect the t...
A passive-like construction in Javanese (Austronesian) highlights how an object topicalization construction can be formally indistinguishable from a passive in languages lacking morphological case. Wh...
This study examines whether animacy affects the acceptability and processing of island-violating wh-questions in Saudi Arabic, and whether this effect interacts with tail type—gap or resumptive pronou...
doi.org
This paper extends Duanmu’s (2000, 2007) analysis of Mandarin consonant–glide (CG) onsets by arguing that articulator dissimilation alone cannot account for the full range of grammatical and ungrammat...
Most phonologists assume that phonological processes are encoded in terms of natural classes defined by sets of features. Thus, children acquiring a phonological grammar need some way to determine the...
In many languages, words in count syntax quantify over countable individuals (e.g., too many strings), while mass nouns often don’t (e.g., too much string). Theories differ in how they characterize no...
doi.org
It is argued that the passive construction, common in the SOV Ob-Ugric sister languages of Hungarian displaying fused grammatical and discourse functions, was a frequent construction in Proto-Hungaria...