All Stories

  1. Optimal categorisation
  2. Splits, internal and external, as a window into the nature of features
  3. Chapter 10. Feature-based competition
  4. Comparability and measurement in typological science: The bright future for linguistics
  5. Extreme classification
  6. Classifiers and gender systems are similar; Mian appears to show both, but to what extent?
  7. Canonical gender
  8. Gender: Grammatical
  9. Dunstan Brown, Marina Chumakina & Greville G. Corbett (eds.), Canonical morphology and syntax (Oxford Linguistics). Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013. Pp. xiv + 312.
  10. The Expression of Gender
  11. Gender typology
  12. Introduction
  13. Grammatical typology and frequency analysis: number availability and number use
  14. Person by other means
  15. Matthew Baerman, Greville G. Corbett, Dunstan Brown & Andrew Hippisley (eds.), Deponency and morphological mismatches. (=Proceedings of the British Academy 145). Oxford: Oxford University Press and the British Academy, 2007. xv+324pp. ISBN: 978-0-19-72...
  16. Aleksandr Kibrik: An appreciation
  17. Conditions on pronominal marking in the Alor-Pantar languages
  18. Periphrasis and Possible Lexemes1
  19. Periphrasis
  20. Definiteness, Gender, and Hybrids: Evidence from Norwegian Dialects
  21. Canonical morphosyntactic features1
  22. Canonical Morphology and Syntax
  23. Appendix Standards and implementations
  24. Canonical Typology and features
  25. Conclusions
  26. Determining feature values
  27. Feature-value mismatches
  28. Features for different components
  29. Formal perspectives
  30. Justifying particular features and their values
  31. References
  32. Typology
  33. Stem alternations and multiple exponence
  34. Defining ‘periphrasis’: key notions
  35. Features
  36. Grammatical relations in a typology of agreement systems
  37. Matthew Baerman, Greville G. Corbett and Dunstan Brown (eds): Defective paradigms: missing forms and what they tell us [= Proceedings of the British Academy 163]
  38. Review of Kibort & Corbett (2010): Features: Perspectives on a key notion in linguistics
  39. Higher order exceptionality in inflectional morphology
  40. Exceptions and what they tell us: reflections on Anderson’s comments
  41. Implicational Hierarchies
  42. Classic problems at the syntax-morphology interface: Whose are they?
  43. Canonical derivational morphology
  44. Greville G. Corbett,Agreement. (= Cambridge textbooks in linguistics). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006. xviii + 328pp. ISBN-10 0-521-00170-6, ISBN-13 978-0-521-001770-0 (paperback), ISBN-10 0-521-80708-5, ISBN-13 978-0-521-80708-1 (h...
  45. Features
  46. Introduction
  47. Features: essential notions
  48. Changing semantic factors in case selection: Russian evidence from the last two centuries
  49. The penumbra of morphosyntactic feature systems
  50. Defective ParadigmsMissing Forms and What They Tell Us
  51. Introduction: Defectiveness: Typology and Diachrony
  52. Matthew Baerman, Greville G. Corbett, Dunstan Brown & Andrew Hippisley (eds.), Deponency and morphological mismatches, (Proceedings of the British Academy 145), Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007. xv + 324 pp.
  53. Matthew Baerman, Greville G. Corbett, Dunstan Brown & Andrew Hippisley (eds.), Deponency and morphological mismatches (Proceedings of the British Academy 145). Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007. Pp. xv+324.
  54. Case and Grammatical Relations
  55. Matthew Baerman, Dunstan Brown & Greville G. Corbett, The syntax-morphology interface: a study of syncretism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005. xx + 281pp. ISBN-13 978-0-521-82181-0.
  56. COLOUR TERMS IN CATALAN: AN INVESTIGATION OF EIGHTY INFORMANTS, CONCENTRATING ON THE PURPLE AND BLUE REGIONS1
  57. Predicate nouns in Russian
  58. The basic colour terms of Lower Sorbian and Upper Sorbian and their typological relevance
  59. Determining morphosyntactic feature values
  60. The alignment of form and function
  61. Agreement
  62. Deponency, Syncretism, and What Lies Between*
  63. Deponency and Morphological Mismatches
  64. Prolegomena to a typology of morphological features
  65. Linguistic typology: Morphology
  66. Canonical Typology, Suppletion, and Possible Words
  67. Formal framework and case studies
  68. The Slavonic Languages
  69. Suppletion in personal pronouns: Theory versus practice, and the place of reproducibility in typology
  70. The Syntax–Morphology Interface
  71. Free-Sorting of Colors Across Cultures: Are there Universal Grounds for Grouping?
  72. The canonical approach in typology*
  73. Historical Changes in the Russian Lexicon: The Incidence of Alternating Suppletivism
  74. Suppletion
  75. Agreement: the range of the phenomenon and the principles of the Surrey Database of Agreement
  76. Introduction
  77. Greville G. Corbett, Number (Cambridge Textbooks in Linguistics). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000. Pp. xx+358. Gunter Senft (ed.), Systems of nominal classification (Language, Culture and Cognition 4). Cam...
  78. Number
  79. Default genders
  80. 7. Morphology, typology, computation
  81. The Semantics of Gender in Mayali: Partially Parallel Systems and Formal Implementation
  82. Dalabon pronominal prefixes and the typology of syncretism: a Network Morphology analysis
  83. Frequency, regularity and the paradigm
  84. Default genders
  85. Number
  86. Conclusion and new challenges
  87. Integrating number values and the Animacy Hierarchy
  88. Introduction
  89. Items involved in the nominal number system
  90. Meaning distinctions
  91. Other uses of number
  92. Preface
  93. References
  94. The expression of number
  95. The syntax of number
  96. Verbal number
  97. Nominal Classification in Aboriginal Australia
  98. Investigating lexical entries and rules: A typological perspective
  99. Introduction
  100. The place of agreement features in a specification of possible agreement systems
  101. Colours in Tsakhur: First account of the basic colour terms of a Nakh-Daghestanian language
  102. Prototypical inflection: implications for typology
  103. The Effect of Noun Incorporation on Argument Structure
  104. Cross-cultural differences in colour vision: Acquired ‘colour-blindness’ in Africa
  105. A Cross-Cultural Study of Color-Grouping: Tests of the Perceptual-Physiology Account of Color Universals
  106. Bernard Comrie and Greville G. Corbett, eds. The Slavonic Languages. London and New York: Routledge, 1993.
  107. Bernard Comrie and Greville G. Corbett, eds. The Slavonic Languages. London and New York: Routledge, 1993.
  108. A developmental study of the acquisition of Russian colour terms
  109. A cross-cultural study of English and Setswana speakers on a colour triads task: A test of the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
  110. Color Terms and Color Term Acquisition in Damara
  111. Defaults in Arapesh
  112. Establishing basic color terms: measures and techniques
  113. A cross-cultural study of colour grouping: Evidence for weak linguistic relativity
  114. Review of Corbett, Frazer & McGlashan (1993): Heads in Grammatical Theory
  115. Associative forms in a typology of number systems: evidence from Yup'ik
  116. Russian noun stress and network morphology
  117. Bernard Comrie & Greville G. Corbett (eds.), The Slavonic languages. London: Routledge, 1993. Pp. xiii + 1078.
  118. Greville G. Corbett, Norman M. Fraser & Scott McGlashan (eds.) Heads in Grammatical Theory, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993. 340 pp. £37.50/US$59.95. ISBN 0-521-42070-9.
  119. Agreement and anti-agreement: A syntax of Luiseño
  120. The basic colour terms of Chichewa
  121. Linguistic and Behavioural Measures for Ranking Basic Colour Terms
  122. The Slavonic Languages
  123. Colour terms in Setswana: The effects of age and urbanization
  124. Gender, Animacy, and Declensional Class Assignment: A Unified Account for Russian
  125. A Statistical Approach to Determining Basic Color Terms: An Account of Xhosa
  126. A developmental study of the acquisition of colour terms in Setswana
  127. Greville G. Corbett, Norman M. Fraser & Scott McGlashan (eds.), Heads in grammatical theory. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992. Pp. ix + 340.
  128. The basic color terms of Russian
  129. The basic colour terms of Ndebele∗
  130. The head of Russian numeral expressions
  131. Heads in Grammatical Theory
  132. Introduction
  133. Patterns of headedness
  134. References
  135. Network Morphology: a DATR account of Russian nominal inflection
  136. Gender
  137. Greville Corbett, Gender. (Cambridge Textbooks in Linguistics.) Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991. Pp. xix + 363.
  138. Gender
  139. Авmомаmuческая обрабоmка mексmа на есmесmвенном языке: мо∂ель согласованuя
  140. Gender
  141. GENDER RESOLUTION RULES
  142. ESTABLISHING THE NUMBER OF GENDERS
  143. GENDER AGREEMENT
  144. GENDER ASSIGNMENT I: SEMANTIC SYSTEMS
  145. GENDER ASSIGNMENT II: FORMAL SYSTEMS
  146. GENERALIZATIONS AND PROSPECTS
  147. HYBRID NOUNS AND THE AGREEMENT HIERARCHY
  148. INTRODUCTION
  149. Preface
  150. References
  151. TARGET GENDERS: SYNCRETISM AND ENFORCED GENDER FORMS
  152. THE PSYCHOLINGUISTIC STATUS OF GENDER ASSIGNMENT
  153. Russian colour term salience
  154. The Scope of Slavic Aspect
  155. Colour terms in Russian: reflections of typological constraints in a single language
  156. The Morphology/Syntax Interface: Evidence from Possessive Adjectives in Slavonic
  157. Computers, Language Learning and Language Teaching
  158. COMPUTERS, LANGUAGE LEARNING AND LANGUAGE TEACHING. Khursid Amad, Greville Corbett, Margaret Rogen, & Roland Sussex. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985. Pp. vii + 158.
  159. A computer corpus of Australian English∗
  160. Lexical Specialization in Russian
  161. Agreement: a partial specification, based on Slavonic data
  162. Hierarchies, Targets and Controllers: Agreement Patterns in Slavic
  163. Animacy in Russian: A New Interpretation
  164. Hierarchies, Targets and Controllers. Agreement Patterns in Slavic
  165. Hierarchies, Targets and Controllers: Agreement Patterns in Slavic
  166. Greville G. Corbett, Hierarchies, targets and controllers: agreement patterns in Slavic. London and Canberra: Croom Helm, 1983. Pp. 260.
  167. David A. Kilby, Deep and superficial cases in Russian. (Specimina Philologiae Slavicea 14, Beiträge zur Kasusgrammatik der slawischen Sprachen 2.) Frankfurt am Main. Distributed by Kubon & Sagner, Munich. 1977. Pp. 186. Gerd Freidhof, Kasusg...
  168. Preface
  169. Why features?
  170. Universals and Features
  171. Formal representation
  172. References
  173. Preface
  174. Conclusion
  175. Characteristics of syncretism
  176. Introduction
  177. Case syncretism in the World Atlas of Language Structures sample
  178. Cross-linguistic typology of features
  179. Person syncretism in the World Atlas of Language Structures sample