Part of
Advances in Iranian Linguistics
Edited by Richard K. Larson, Sedigheh Moradi and Vida Samiian
[Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 351] 2020
► pp. 85106
References
Adibifar, Shirin
2016Multi-CAST Persian. In Geoffrey Haig & Stefan Schnell (eds.), Multi-CAST: Multilingual corpus of annotated spoken texts. [URL] (25 June 2019).
Baker, Mark
2011When agreement is for number and gender but not person. Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 29. 875–915. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Chomsky, Noam
1995The minimalist program. Cambridge: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Corbett, Greville G.
2006Agreement. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Dabir-Moghaddam, Mohammad
2008On agent clitics in Balochi in comparison with other Iranian languages. In Carina Jahani, Agnes Korn & Paul Titus (eds.), The Baloch and others, 83–100. Wiesbaden: Reichert.Google Scholar
Fonseca-Greber, Bonnibeth
2000The change from pronoun to clitic and the rise of null subjects in spoken Swiss French. Tucson, AZ: University of Arizona dissertation.Google Scholar
Fuß, Eric
2005The rise of agreement. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Gelderen, Elly van
2011aThe grammaticalization of agreement. In Bernd Heine & Heiko Narrog (eds.), The Oxford handbook of grammaticalization.Google Scholar
van Gelderen, Elly
2011bThe linguistic cycle. Language change and the language faculty. Oxford: Oxford University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Givón, Talmy
1976Topic, pronoun and grammatical agreement. In Charles Li (ed.), Subject and topic, 151–188. New York: Academic.Google Scholar
Hadjidas, Harris & Maria Vollmer
2015Multi-CAST Cypriot Greek. In Geoffrey Haig & Stefan Schnell (eds.), Multi-CAST: Multilingual Corpus of Annotated Spoken Texts. [URL] (25 June 2019).
Haig, Geoffrey
2008Alignment change in Iranian languages: A construction grammar approach. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
2017Deconstructing Iranian ergativity. In Jessica Coon, Diane Massam & Lisa Travis (eds.), The Oxford handbook of ergativity, 465–500. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
2018aGrammaticalization and inflectionalization in Iranian. In Heiko Narrog & Bernd Heine (eds.), Grammaticalization from a typological perspective, 57–78. Oxford: Oxford University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
2018bThe grammaticalization of object pronouns: Why differential object indexing is an attractor state. Linguistics 56(4). 781–818. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Haig, Geoffrey & Širin Adibifar
2019Referential Null Subjects (RNS) in colloquial spoken Persian: Does speaker familiarity have an impact? In Alireza Korangy & Behrooz Mahmoodi-Bakhtiari (eds.), Essays on the typology of Iranian languages, 102–121. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Haig, Geoffrey & Hanna Thiele
2015Multi-CAST Northern Kurdish. In Geoffrey Haig & Stefan Schnell (eds.), Multi-CAST Multilingual Corpus of Annotated Spoken Texts. [URL] (25 June 2019).
Jügel, Thomas
2015Die Entwicklung der Ergativkonstruktion im Alt- und Mitteliranischen: Eine korpusbasierte Untersuchung zu Kasus, Kongruenz und Satzbau. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Kahnemuyipour, Arsalan
2003Syntactic categories and Persian stress. Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 21. 333–379. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
van Kemenade, Ans
2000Jespersen’s Cycle revisited: Formal properties of grammaticalization. In Susan Pintzuk, George Tsoulas & Anthony Warner (eds.), Diachronic syntax: Models and mechanisms. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Korn, Agnes
2009Western Iranian pronominal clitics. Orientalia Suecana 58. 159–171.Google Scholar
Lazard, Gilbert
2006 [1957]Grammaire du persan contemporain. Nouvelle edition avec la collaboration de Yann Richard, Rokhsareh Hechmati et Pollet Samvelian. Téhéran: Institut Français de Recherche en Iran. [Originally published 1957.]Google Scholar
Lecoq, Pierre
1979Le dialecte de Sivand. Wiesbaden: Reichert.Google Scholar
MacKenzie, David
1961Kurdish dialect studies, vol. 1. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
1962Kurdish dialect studies, vol. 2. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
1966The dialect of Awroman (Hawrāmān-ī Luhōn). Grammatical sketch, texts, and vocabulary. København: Det Kongelige Danske Videnskabernes Selskab.Google Scholar
Öpengin, Ergin
2013Clitic/affix interactions: A corpus-based study of person marking in the Mukri variety of Central Kurdish. Paris III/Bamberg dissertation.Google Scholar
2016The Mukri variety of Central Kurdish: Grammar, texts and lexicon. Wiesbaden: Reichert.Google Scholar
2019Accounting for the combinations of clitic and affix person markers in Central Kurdish. In Gündoğdu, Songül, Ergin Öpengin, Geoffrey Haig & Erik Anonby (eds.), Current Issues in Kurdish Linguistics, 243–261. Bamberg: University of Bamberg Press.Google Scholar
Öpengin, Ergin & Masoud Mohammadirad
Forthcoming. Formal and functional variation in pronominal clitics across Kurdish: documentation and explanations. In Yaron Matras, Ergin Öpengin & Geoffrey Haig eds. Structural and typological variation in the dialects of Kurdish London Palgrave Macmillan
Paul, Ludwig
1998Zazaki. Grammatik und Versuch einer Dialektologie. Wiesbaden: Reichert.Google Scholar
Rasekh, Mohammad
2014Persian clitics: Doubling and agreement. Journal of Modern Languages 24(1). 16–33. [URL] (10 October 2017).
Samvelian, Pollet
2007What Sorani Kurdish absolute prepositions tell us about cliticization. In Frederick Hoyt, Nikki Seifert, Alexandra Teodorescu & Jessica White (eds.) Proceedings of the Texas Linguistic Society IX: The morphosyntax of understudied languages, 265–285. Stanford, Calif.: CSLI online publications. [URL] (accessed 10 October 2017).
Schiering, René
2005Cliticization and the evolution of morphology: A cross-linguistic study on phonology in grammaticalization. Konstanz: University of Konstanz dissertation.Google Scholar
Schnell, Stefan
2018Whence subject-verb agreement? Investigating the role of topicality, accessibility, and frequency in Vera’a texts. Linguistics 56(4). 735–780. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Siewierska, Anna
1999From anaphoric pronoun to grammatical agreement marker: Why objects donʼt make it. Folia Linguistica 33(1–2). 225–251.Google Scholar
2004Person. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Stilo, Don
2018The Caspian region and South Azerbaijan: Caspian and Tatic. In Geoffrey Haig & Geoffrey Khan (eds.), The languages and linguistics of Western Asia. An areal perspective, 659–824. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Torres Cacoullos, Rena & Catherine Travis
2019Variationist typology: Shared probabilistic constraints across (non-)null subject languages. Linguistics 57(3). 653–692. DOI logoGoogle Scholar