1,332 search results for “linguistics” in the Public website
-
Tian Yang
Faculty of Humanities
-
Xuan Tang
Faculty of Humanities
-
Anikó Lipták
Faculty of Humanities
-
Colin Ewen
Faculty of Humanities
-
Egbert Fortuin
Faculty of Humanities
-
Astrid Vandendaele
Faculty of Humanities
-
Jiaqi Wang
Faculty of Humanities
-
Martijn Lemmen
Faculty of Humanities
-
Arie Verhagen
Faculty of Humanities
-
Siavash Rafiee Rad
Faculty of Humanities
-
M. Y. Priscilla Lam
Faculty of Humanities
-
Benjamin Storme
Faculty of Humanities
-
Maarten Kossmann
Faculty of Humanities
-
Michaël Opgenhaffen
Faculty of Humanities
-
Amos van Baalen
Faculty of Humanities
-
Michaël Peyrot
Faculty of Humanities
-
Benjamin Suchard
Faculty of Humanities
-
Janet Grijzenhout
Faculty of Humanities
-
Martine Bruil
Faculty of Humanities
-
Yiya Chen
Faculty of Humanities
-
Olga Lundysheva
Faculty of Humanities
-
Elisabeth Kerr
Faculty of Humanities
-
Tina Cambier-Langeveld
Faculty of Humanities
-
Matthew Sung
Faculty of Humanities
-
Jenneke van der Wal
Faculty of Humanities
-
Maria del Carmen Parafita Couto
Faculty of Humanities
-
Kate Bellamy
Faculty of Humanities
-
Matthijs Westera
Faculty of Humanities
-
Martin Kroon
Faculty of Humanities
-
The Hittite Inherited Lexicon
This dissertation attempts to describe the linguistic history of Hittite on the basis of a systematic etymological treatment of its entire inherited lexicon, precisely analyzing the phonological and morphological developments.
-
The nature of evidentiality
This project launches a research program into the theoretical status and the terminological basis of evidentiality systems.
-
Splitting and clustering grammatical information
This project focuses on a striking parallelism between two macro-groups of languages: southern Italian dialects and the so-called split-ergative languages, like Basque, Georgian, Dyirbal, Hindi/Urdu.
-
An experimental approach to the interaction of tone sandhi and focus expression in six dialects of Chinese
This project employs a systematic experimental approach to examine the interaction of these two hitherto independent lines of research (tone sandhi and focus realization) in six dialects of Chinese, which lie on a continuum between dialects with dense tonal distributions and sparser distributions. In…
-
Chinese Final Particles and the Syntax of the Periphery
In this research, for the first time a detailed description as well as systematic and comparative analysis of the final particle system in Chinese are provided.
-
Modelling phonologization: Vowel reduction and epenthesis in Lunigiana dialects
This dissertation provides a formal description of the relationship between diatopic/diachronic micro-variation and phonologization through analysis of the phonetic/phonological properties of unstressed vowel reduction and vowel insertion in two Northern Italian dialects.
-
The dynamics of light verbs in the history of West Germanic languages
The main question of this research project concerns the extent to which light verbs in West Germanic languages participate in processes of language change.
-
Word processing in languages using non-alphabetic scripts: The cases of Japanese and Chinese
This thesis investigates the processing of words written in Japanese kanji and Chinese hànzì, i.e. logographic scripts.
-
I 'Disticha Catonis' di Catenaccio da Anagni. Testo in volgare laziale (secc. XIII ex. - XIV in.)
The Disticha Catonis by Catenaccio of Anagni. A text in vernacular from Latium (late 13th - early 14th century)
-
A grammar of Bantawa: Grammar, paradigm tables, glossary and texts of a Rai language of Eastern Nepal
This dissertation provides a comprehensive overview of the grammar of Bantawa, a Kiranti (Rai) language spoken in Eastern Nepal.
-
Contact-induced change in Dolgan
This study explores the role of linguistic data in the reconstruction of Dolgan (pre)history by analyzing contact-induced changes and using them to infer information about the nature of the contact settings in which they occurred.
-
Marian Klamer receives NWO Vici-grant
Linguist Marian Klamer, associated with Leiden University Centre for Linguistics, is one of the 31 scientists to receive a NWO Vici-grant for her researchproject 'Language as a time machine'.
-
Guus Kroonen
Faculty of Humanities
-
Alwin Kloekhorst
Faculty of Humanities
-
Interpreting particles in dead and living languages: A construction grammar approach to the semantics of Dutch ergens and Ancient Greek pou
In this dissertation, the types of context Dutch speakers need to interpret the poly-interpretable word ergens ‘somewhere/anywhere’ are studied.
-
Letters confiscated from Dutch ships now online
More than a thousand 17th- and 18th-century Dutch letters from seized ships are now available online. The letters are a gold mine for researchers wanting to study the everyday language used by men and women during this period.
-
Verbal art of the Fon (Benin)
This publication aims at the analysis of the performance of a corpus of Fongbe stories that I collected in three villages in the south of Benin in 1976 and 1977. The corpus consists of 37 stories (57.000 words). The stories aim at children’s education.
-
Tonal Bilingualism: The Case of Two Closely Related Chinese Dialects
Tonal bilinguals of two closely related Chinese dialects are amazing people. They handle two tonal systems in their mind; their two vocabularies are from closely related dialects, and they write translation equivalents with common Chinese characters. Their unique language situation makes their mind…
-
Die biblisch-hebräische Partikel נָא im Lichte der antiken Bibelübersetzungen. Unter besonderer Berücksichtigung ihrer vermuteten Höflichkeitsfunktion
My research addresses the function of the much-debated particle -nā in Biblical Hebrew, often translated with “please”, from the point of view of the most important ancient Bible translations (Greek, Syriac, Latin). It combines textual criticism, translation technique, discourse pragmatics, and the…
-
Under Construction. Cognitive and Computational Aspects of Extended Lexical Units
This dissertation investigates Extended Lexical Units (ELUs), elements that are bigger than just one word and which are stored in the Lexicon.
-
Third oldest Papiamento text discovered
Leiden University researchers have discovered by chance a note from 1783 in Papiamento. They are working on a linguistic study on confiscated Dutch letters. The ‘Letters as loot’ project is headed by Professor Marijke van der Wal.