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Kinn. WPSS 88. Slutversion

Kinn. WPSS 88. Slutversion Working Papers in Scandinavian Syntax 88 (2011), 21-50 Overt non-referential subjects and subject-verb agreement in Middle Norwegian1 Kari Kinn, University of Oslo Abstract This paper is a contribution to the long-standing debate on the relationship between subject- verb-agreement and the need for overt non-referential subjects. On the basis of new Middle Norwegian data

https://projekt.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/_migrated/content_uploads/Kinn._WPSS_88._Slutversion.pdf - 2026-05-14

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33 An unexpected gap with unexpected restrictions Subject deletion in a south-west Swedish dialect∗ Katarina Lundin Lund University Abstract The aim of this article is to propose a syntactic analysis of a dialectal con- struction systematically displaying deletion of the subject, found in spoken south-west Swedish. The deletion appears in certain interrogative subordi- nated clauses and relative c

https://projekt.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/_migrated/content_uploads/Lundin92.pdf - 2026-05-14

Revised 170517 - Subordinate V2 and verbal morhoplogy in O_vdalian

Revised 170517 - Subordinate V2 and verbal morhoplogy in O_vdalian Working Papers in Scandinavian Syntax 98 (2017), 83–104 Subordinate V2 and Verbal Morphology in Övdalian Ásgrímur Angantýsson University of Iceland Abstract The purpose of this paper is (i) to locate Övdalian among the Scandinavian languages with regard to verbal morphology and embedded V2, and (ii) to formalize and test hypotheses

https://projekt.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/_migrated/content_uploads/Angantysson_01.pdf - 2026-05-14

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Semiosis and the elusive final interpretant of understanding* GÖRAN SONESSON Abstract While the conceptual history of the sign, as recounted by John Deely in Four ages of understanding, is immensely enlightening, history is never enough. If, before Augustine, it had occurred to no one that such diverse phenomena as are covered by this term had something in common, and if, in the time of Aquinas,

https://projekt.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/projekt_ccs/semi_2010_178_511-624.pdf - 2026-05-14

psychol 19136

psychol 19136 Uncorrected first proofs. Wagoner/Symbolic Transformation published by Routledge, copyright 2010. NOT FOR DISTRIBUTION 13:15:14:08:09 Page 38 Page 38 2 Here comes the semiotic species Reflections on the semiotic turn in the cognitive sciences1 Göran Sonesson Lund University, Sweden Cognitive semiotics – or, perhaps better, semiotic cognitive science – aims to bring together the knowl

https://projekt.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/projekt_ccs/ch2_sonesson.pdf - 2026-05-14

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81 Working Papers in Scandinavian Syntax 87 (2011), 81–102 Embedded declaratives, assertion and swear words Ulla Stroh-Wollin Department of Scandinavian Languages Uppsala University Abstract This article discusses embedded declaratives and their force of expressing assertion, a topic that was debated by Anna-Lena Wiklund and Marit Julien in both numbers of this working paper series 2009. Two quest

https://projekt.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/_migrated/content_uploads/WPSS87_Stroh_Wollin.pdf - 2026-05-14

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Proceedings of the 10th World Congress of the International Association for Semiotic Studies (IASS/AIS) Universidade da Coruña (España / Spain), 2012. ISBN: 978-84-9749-522-6 Pp. 197-1408197-1408-1408 A Final Move in Chess. Beyond the Picture Sign in Visual Semiotics Göran SoneSSon Lund University, Malmö (Sweden) Abstract It is something of a paradox that, within semiotics, the science of meaning,

https://projekt.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/projekt_ccs/finalmovechess.pdf - 2026-05-14

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Displacement and Subject Blocking in Verbal Idioms: Evidence from Passive-Like Constructions in Icelandic* Anton Karl Ingason,1 Einar Freyr Sigurðsson,2 Jim Wood3 1University of Iceland, 2University of Pennsylvania and 3Yale University Abstract This paper examines passive-like constructions in Icelandic and argues that id- ioms cannot be interpreted via traces and that the loss of idiomatic interp

https://projekt.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/_migrated/content_uploads/2._Ingasson-Sigurdsson-Wood_01.pdf - 2026-05-14

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Prologue Bodily motion, emotion and mind science Jordan Zlatev Lund University 1.  Why ‘motion’ and ‘emotion’? This book emerged as a happy coincidence. Or was it perhaps a matter of unplanned, but non-accidental “distributed cognition”? In retrospect it seems that it was some- thing that was just waiting to happen. Based on our edited volume The Shared Mind (Zlatev et  al. 2008), Tim Racine, Chri

https://projekt.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/projekt_ccs/01zla-preprint.pdf - 2026-05-11

Framsida Sthlm copy

Framsida Sthlm copy WPSS WORKING PAPERS IN SCANDINAVIAN SYNTAX June 2018 Issue 100 Working Papers in Scandinavian Syntax is an electronic publication for current articles relating to the study of Scandinavian syntax. The articles appearing herein are previously unpublished reports of ongoing research activities and may subsequently appear, revised or unrevised, in other publications. The WPSS home

https://projekt.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/projekt_grimm/working_papers/2018-jun/WPSS_100.pdf - 2026-05-14

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To appear in Cognitive Semiotics, Special issue on Anthroposemiotics vs. Biosemiotics, Vol 4 Spring 2009 The Semiotic Hierarchy: Life, Consciousness, Signs and Language Jordan Zlatev Centre for Languages and Literature, Centre for Cognitive Semiotics, Lund University Centre for Language, Cognition and Mentality, Copenhagen Business School Abstract This article outlines a general theory of meaning,

https://projekt.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/projekt_ccs/Zlatev.CS.2009.pdf - 2026-05-14

Sammanställning

Sammanställning Working Papers in Scandinavian Syntax 87 (2011), 103-135. Fronting, Background, Focus A comparative study of Sardinian and Icelandic * Verner Egerland, Lund University Abstract There is a superficial similarity between fronting phenomena attested in Sardinian and Icelandic. Nevertheless, the two languages are radically different as for the pragmatic interpretation associated with f

https://projekt.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/_migrated/content_uploads/WPSS87_Egerland.pdf - 2026-05-14

Vidarsson

Vidarsson Working Papers in Scandinavian Syntax 99 (2017), 30–53 Grimm’s “floating” datives: Applicatives and NP/DP configurationality in Icelandic from a diachronic perspective Heimir van der Feest Viðarsson University of Iceland ‘Free’ dative benefactives, elements that do not clearly belong to the obligatory argument structure of the verb, have long been considered elusive by linguists, referre

https://projekt.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/projekt_grimm/working_papers/Vidarsson.pdf - 2026-05-14

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Topicalization: The IO/DO Asymmetry in Icelandic* Elena Callegari and Anton Karl Ingason University of Iceland Abstract In this paper, we investigate differences in the frequency of direct-object versus indirect-object topicalization (i.e. fronting with no accompanying pronom- inal resumption) in Icelandic using the Icelandic Parsed Historical Corpus. We find that the overall incidence of DO topic

https://projekt.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/projekt_grimm/working_papers/June_2021/Callegari-Ingason.pdf - 2026-05-14

wpss84

wpss84 WORKING PAPERS IN SCANDINAVIAN SYNTAX 84 Maia Andreasson Pronominal object shift – not just a matter of shifting or not 1–20 Gunnar Hrafn Hrafnbjargarsson & Anna-Lena Wiklund General embedded V2: Icelandic A, B, C, etc. 21–52 Gunlög Josefsson “Disagreeing” pronominal reference and gender in Swedish 53–100 David Petersson Embedded V2 does not exist in Swedish 101–149 Henrik Rosenkvist Refere

https://projekt.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/_migrated/content_uploads/WPSS_05.pdf - 2026-05-14

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Semiotica 183–1/4 (2011), 219–241 0037–1998/11/0183–0219 DOI 10.1515/semi.2011.011 © Walter de Gruyter Abstract It is difficult to make sense of the notion of postmodernity, because “moder- nity” is clearly a shifter, in the sense of Jespersen and Jakobson: a term depen- dent for its meaning on its moment of enunciation. It is true that, from the Middle Ages onwards, several meanings of modernity

https://projekt.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/projekt_ccs/semi_2011_183_219-242.pdf - 2026-05-14

WPSS 91.framsida

WPSS 91.framsida WORKING PAPERS IN SCANDINAVIAN SYNTAX 91 Roland Hinterhölzl Economy conditions and coreference: From minimal pronouns to referential acts 1-35 Dorian Roehrs Possessives as Extended Projections 37-112 Björn Lundquist On inter-individual variation and mid-distance binding in Swedish 113-146 Verner Egerland The Apropos-Topic, the Concerning-Topic and the syntax- pragmatics interface

https://projekt.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/_migrated/content_uploads/WPSS_12.pdf - 2026-05-14

Litomysl-3

Litomysl-3 The Sedimentation and Motivation (SEaM) model in an Ecological Theory of Metaphor Jordan Zlatev Lund University CCS Seminar 1/9 2017 Summer School of Linguistics 2017 Litomyšl Preamble I was invited to give a talk on metaphor (from a cognitive semiotic perspective) at the 6th Specialized RaAM Seminar “Ecological Cognition and Metaphor”, May 18-19, 2017 The theme of the conference was

https://projekt.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/projekt_ccs/Litomysl-3.pdf - 2026-05-14

The social and linguistic construction of time in an Amazonian culture

The social and linguistic construction of time in an Amazonian culture To appear in Luna Filipovič and Kasia M. Jaszczolt (eds.) Space and Time in Languages and Cultures II: Language, Culture, and Cognition. Human Cognitive Processing 37. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. 1 Event-based time intervals in an Amazonian culture. * Vera da Silva Sinha (Federal University of Rondônia) Chris Sinha (Lund Univers

https://projekt.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/projekt_ccs/SilvaSinha-etal-reprint.pdf - 2026-05-14