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Syntactic complexity in Standard Average European: the role of language contact and DTs of Communicative Distance KU Leuven
This chapter argues that the origins of Standard Average European (SAE) are intimately related to Eastern influenced Biblical Latin and Germanic influenced Carolingian Latin. Both medieval varieties of Latin combine contact patterns with the presence of grammatical complexity in high prestige textual traditions. The impact of Classical Latin came with the later elaboration of the European vernacular languages into national standard languages ...
Syndetic and asyndetic complementation in Spanish. A diachronic probabilistic account KU Leuven
My dissertation focuses on the alternation between syndetic and asyndetic finite complement clauses in Spanish. Syndetic complements, introduced by an explicit complementizer que 'that', as in (1a), are the most frequent patterns of complementation in Present‑day Spanish. Alternatively, a complement clause can also be introduced asyndetically, i.e. without the complementizer que, as shown in (1b), where the absence of the complementizer is ...
Syntactic alternations and socio-stylistic constraints: the case of asyndetic complementation in the history of Spanish KU Leuven
This paper analyses the alternation between complement clauses with and without complementizer (syndetic and asyndetic), in historical Spanish (15th–18th century). While previous studies have shown that this syntactic alternation was regulated by the degree of integration of the clauses, its stylistic distribution is understudied. In this paper we investigate whether the syndetic/asyndetic alternation is governed by socio-stylistic factors ...
Asyndetic complementation and referential integration in Spanish: a diachronic probabilistic grammar account KU Leuven
This paper examines a distinctive syntactic feature of (pre)classical Spanish: asyndetic complementation (without complementizer que 'that'). While many authors regard this construction as a stylistic variant which eventually declined (i.a. Girón 2005), so far no exhaustive morphosyntactic study of the phenomenon has been presented, as previous works either have focused on only one predicate (Blas Arroyo & Porcar Miralles 2016, 2018) or do ...