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  1. The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics
  2. The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics : Volume 8
  3. The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics : Volume 8, Issue 1-2, April 2005
  4. Immobile complex verbs in Germanic
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The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics : Volume 20
The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics : Volume 19
The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics : Volume 18
The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics : Volume 17
The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics : Volume 16
The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics : Volume 15
The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics : Volume 14
The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics : Volume 13
The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics : Volume 12
The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics : Volume 11
The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics : Volume 10
The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics : Volume 9
The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics : Volume 8
The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics : Volume 8, Issue 1-2, April 2005
How to turn German into Icelandic – and derive the OV–VO contrasts
Arguing our way to the Direct Object Restriction on English resultatives
Immobile complex verbs in Germanic
Wh-questions, V2, and the Left Periphery of Three Norwegian Dialect types
The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics : Volume 8, Issue 3, January 2005
The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics : Volume 7
The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics : Volume 6
The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics : Volume 5
The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics : Volume 4
The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics : Volume 3
The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics : Volume 2
The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics : Volume 1

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Immobile complex verbs in Germanic

Content Provider Springer Nature Link
Author Vikner, Sten
Copyright Year 2005
Abstract Certain complex verbs in Dutch, German, and Swiss German do not undergo verb movement. The suggestion to be made in this article is that these ‘‘immobile’’ verbs have to fulfill both the requirements imposed on complex verbs of the V° type (=verbs with non-separable prefixes) and the requirements imposed on complex verbs of the V* type (=verbs with separable prefixes). This results in such verbs being morphologically unexceptional, i.e., having a full set of forms but syntactically peculiar (‘‘immobile’’), i.e., they can only occur in their base position. Any movement is incompatible with either the V° requirements or the V* requirements.
Starting Page 83
Ending Page 115
Page Count 33
File Format PDF
ISSN 13834924
Journal The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics
Volume Number 8
Issue Number 1-2
e-ISSN 15728552
Language English
Publisher Kluwer Academic Publishers
Publisher Date 2005-01-01
Publisher Place Dordrecht
Access Restriction Subscribed
Subject Keyword back-formation complex verbs OV-languages particle verbs separable particles V° -to-I° movement verb second Linguistics (general) Comparative Linguistics Germanic Languages Syntax Theoretical Languages
Content Type Text
Resource Type Article
Subject Arts and Humanities Linguistics and Language
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