Search results for "Case alternation"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Resolving the locus of cAsE aLtErNaTiOn effects in visual word recognition: Evidence from masked priming.

2015

Determining the factors that modulate the early access of abstract lexical representations is imperative for the formulation of a comprehensive neural account of visual-word identification. There is a current debate on whether the effects of case alternation (e.g., tRaIn vs. train) have an early or late locus in the word-processing stream. Here we report a lexical decision experiment using a technique that taps the early stages of visual-word recognition (i.e., masked priming). In the design, uppercase targets could be preceded by an identity/unrelated prime that could be in lowercase or alternating case (e.g., table-TABLE vs. crash-TABLE; tAbLe-TABLE vs. cRaSh-TABLE). Results revealed that…

Linguistics and LanguageCase alternationCognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectRepetition primingExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyLocus (genetics)Language and LinguisticsIdentity (music)Prime (order theory)Reading (process)Repetition PrimingDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyLexical decision taskHumansmedia_commonCommunicationbusiness.industryRecognition PsychologyPattern Recognition VisualReadingbusinessPsychologyPriming (psychology)Photic StimulationCognitive psychologyCognition
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Subject case alternation in Latvian and Estonian existential clauses

2019

In Latvian and Estonian existential clauses, the subject’s case form alternates between nominative vs. genitive (in Latvian) and nominative vs. partitive (in Estonian). This article is a study of the case-alternation systems of existential clauses and related clause types, locative and possessive clauses in these languages. It includes a corpusbased analysis of Latvian existential clauses that is being compared with Estonian corpus-based findings on similar clause types in Estonian. *** Subjekti kaandevaheldus lati ja eesti keele eksistentsiaallausetes Nii eesti kui ka lati keeles esineb subjekti kaandevaheldust. Lati keeles saab subjekt olla lisaks nominatiivile ka genitiivis, eesti keeles…

Linguistics and LanguageCase alternationlcsh:Finnic. Baltic-Finniclcsh:PH91-98.5Language and LinguisticsEducationlcsh:P1-1091genitivegenitiivSubject (grammar)TheologypartitiivPhilosophyLatvianEstonianeitusEstonianlanguage.human_languagelcsh:Philology. Linguisticseesti keelnegationlanguageläti keelnominativenominatiivpartitiveLatvianEesti Rakenduslingvistika Ühingu aastaraamat. Estonian Papers in Applied Linguistics
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Subject case alternation in negated existential, locative, and possessive clauses in Latvian

2018

[full article and abstract in English]
 The goal of this article is to analyse the alternation between the genitive and nominative cases in Latvian. As the alternation between genitive and nominative cases is possible in all clauses in which the verb būt ‘to be’ is used as an independent verb, this article examines existential, locative, and also possessive clauses, while also demonstrating that distinguishing these clause types is problematic for Latvian utilising the criteria given in the linguistic literature. Clauses containing the negative form of būt ‘to be’, i.e. nebūt, form the foundation of those selected for this study, as only in these sentences the genitive/nominative alter…

lcsh:Language and LiteratureLinguistics and LanguageHistoryCase alternationLatvianlocative clausesLocative caseNominative casePossessiveLanguage and Linguisticslanguage.human_languageExistentialismLinguisticslcsh:Philology. LinguisticsGenitive caselcsh:P1-1091genitiveSubject (grammar)existential clauseslanguagelcsh:Ppossessive clausesnominativesubjectKalbotyra
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