Skip to content
Channels - Antisymmetry, Morphological Merger, and Chinese Resultative Compounding :: FRELIP Discovery
Home
Search
Guides
Journals
Learning
FRELIP Discovery Search
Open Access Catalog for African Scholarship
Channels
Antisymmetry, Morphological Merger, and Chinese Resultative Compounding
Search for more channels:
Similar Items: Antisymmetry, Morphological Merger, and Chinese Resultative Compounding
Channel Options
View Record
Explore related channels
Quick Look
Antisymmetry and Externalization
Quick Look
Echo Answers in Chinese
Quick Look
Rethinking Wh-island Effects in Chinese
Quick Look
Results from the Linguistic Survey of Sikkim
Quick Look
Brokpa nominal morphology
Quick Look
Morphological productivity and neological intuition
Quick Look
Multiple constraints modulate the processing of Chinese reflexives in discourse
Quick Look
Morphophonemic variation in the nominal morphology of Assamese
Quick Look
Towards a Theory of Morphology as Syntax
Quick Look
All Are Connected: From Traditional Chinese Medicine to Students’ Literacy Practices Reviewing Doing Difference Differently: Chinese International Students’ Literacy Practices and Affordances by Zhaozhe Wang
Quick Look
The morphological and syntactic functions of Dagbani nominal suffixes
Quick Look
The Interaction Between Modals and SFPs in Mandarin Chinese: A Cartographic Approach
Quick Look
Meaning or morphology: Individual differences in the categorization of Kinyarwanda nouns
Quick Look
Subject Raising in Chinese Modal Auxiliary Verb Constructions: A-movement or A′-movement?
Quick Look
A study of the Morphological Patterns of Collocation in Assamese: A Thematic Overview
Quick Look
The Difference and Motivation of the Semantic Conflation Patterns in Chinese and English Autonomous Motion Event Sentences: Path and Containers
Quick Look
Cross-Linguistic Constraints on Subjecthood in Causative Psych Verbs: An Experimental Investigation of Korean, Mandarin Chinese and English
Quick Look
Does productive agreement morphology increase sensitivity to agreement in a second language?
Quick Look
Borrowing bound and free synonyms: How Mangghuer speakers enrich their speech and their lexicon by creating synonymy via Chinese borrowings
Quick Look
Towards a pragmatic explanation for the prevalence of upward-monotonicity in natural language: some results on communicative stability, the strongest answer condition, and exhaustification
Quick Look
Long-lag identity priming in the absence of long-lag morphological priming: evidence from Mandarin tone alternation
Quick Look
Tackling End Users’ Perception of Song Lyrics Translation: An Attitude-Analysis Approach to Subtitling Comments about “See You Again” in Chinese Music App NetEase Cloud
Quick Look
Thadou morphophonemics
Quick Look
Possessive prefixes in Proto-Kusunda
Load more items
View Record
Prev
Explore related channels
Next