Alan Libert | University of Newcastle, New South Wales
Adpositional objects in Turkic languages can bear a variety of different cases, and the same adposition can often assign more than one case. For example, Turkish postpositions take objects in the nominative (or absolute), genitive, dative, or ablative case, and some assign either nominative or genitive, depending on certain properties of the object. This paper presents the main facts about the complex case-marking behavior of Turkic postpositions and places them in a cross-linguistic context. We shall see that, on the one hand, Turkic languages resemble many other languages in some relevant respects, while on the other hand, they are unusual in some ways, for example in having nominative postpositional objects.
2010. Introduction. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I, ► pp. 1 ff.
Miller, D. Gary
2010. Tempo and Mora in Phonological Change. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I, ► pp. 238 ff.
Miller, D. Gary
2010. Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I,
Miller, D. Gary
2010. Inverted Operations. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I, ► pp. 205 ff.
Miller, D. Gary
2010. How Language Change is Investigated. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I, ► pp. 12 ff.
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2010. Vowel Shifts and the Middle English Vowels. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I, ► pp. 270 ff.
Miller, D. Gary
2010. Building on the Tradition. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I, ► pp. 64 ff.
Miller, D. Gary
2010. Analogy and Systematic Repair. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I, ► pp. 97 ff.
Miller, D. Gary
2010. Reconstructing Language History. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I, ► pp. 39 ff.
Miller, D. Gary
2010. Denaturalized Phonetic Processes. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I, ► pp. 221 ff.
Miller, D. Gary
2010. Natural Processes. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I, ► pp. 171 ff.
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2010. Motivations of Language Change. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I, ► pp. 123 ff.
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2010. Abbreviations. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I, ► pp. xvii ff.
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2010. Primary Sources: Texts and Editions. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I, ► pp. 293 ff.
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2010. Dating and Other Conventions. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I, ► pp. xv ff.
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2010. Special Phonetic Symbols. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I, ► pp. 288 ff.
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2010. Bibliographical Abbreviations. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I, ► pp. xxix ff.
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2010. Preface. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I, ► pp. xii ff.
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2010. Copyright Page. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I, ► pp. iv ff.
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