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1

Matracki, Ivica, and Francesca Sammartino. "I possessivi nel croato molisano." Italica Wratislaviensia 14, no. 1 (2023): 97–119. http://dx.doi.org/10.15804/iw.2023.14.1.05.

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Riprendendo l’idea di Seiler e di Heine, il possesso è la relazione che si instaura tra due costituenti, possessore (possessor) e posseduto (possessum). Il possesso linguistico può essere di diverso tipo: permanente, fisico, inalienabile, astratto ecc. Sia in italiano che in croato il possesso è reso con aggettivi, pronomi e sintagmi preposizionali, ma il croato possiede il caso morfologico per esprimere il possesso. In italiano il possesso è reso con gli aggettivi e i pronomi possessivi (mia sorella) e il complemento di specificazione possessiva (la sorella di Mira). In croato esso è espresso
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2

Matracki, Ivica Peša. "I possessivi nel croato molisano." Italica Wratislaviensia 14, no. 1 (2023): 97–119. http://dx.doi.org/10.15804/iw.2022.14.1.05.

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Riprendendo l’idea di Seiler e di Heine, il possesso è la relazione che si instaura tra due costituenti, possessore (possessor) e posseduto (possessum). Il possesso linguistico può essere di diverso tipo: permanente, fisico, inalienabile, astratto ecc. Sia in italiano che in croato il possesso è reso con aggettivi, pronomi e sintagmi preposizionali, ma il croato possiede il caso morfologico per esprimere il possesso. In italiano il possesso è reso con gli aggettivi e i pronomi possessivi (mia sorella) e il complemento di specificazione possessiva (la sorella di Mira). In croato esso è espresso
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3

Siregar, Usmala Dewi, and Mulyadi Mulyadi. "Konstruksi Posesif Bahasa Inggris dalam Cerita Pendek There Will Come Soft Rains." CaLLs (Journal of Culture, Arts, Literature, and Linguistics) 5, no. 1 (2019): 39. http://dx.doi.org/10.30872/calls.v5i1.1961.

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This study aims to describe the type of possessive construction and the possessive relationship between possessor/PR and possessum/PM in the possessive construction of English in short story There Will Come Soft Rains by Ray Bradbury. The data were taken from sentences contained possessive construction in short story it. The data were collected by reading and noting and were analyzed by means of the distributional method to determine the type of possessive construction relationship and the correspondence method to determine the possessive relationships between the possessor and the possessed.
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4

Butorin, S. S. "The ways of expressing attributive possession in Ket: possessive syntactic constructions." Sibirskiy filologicheskiy zhurnal, no. 2 (2021): 235–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.17223/18137083/75/17.

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The paper analyzes the structural models of Ket possessive constructions. The means of ex-pressing possessive construction components and the ways of marking possessive relations between the first possessive construction component denoting the subject of possession (a possessor) and the second component indicating the object of possession (a possessum) are considered. The study is based on the conception proposed by E. Vajda, according to which the possessive markers are possessive pronominal clitics, used as either clitics or proclitics, depending on the context. Two-component and multiple-co
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5

Amin, Basir. "Predicative Possession in Learning English: Syntactic Study." International Journal of Social Science and Human Research 05, no. 06 (2022): 2304–8. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6674145.

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The discussion on predicative possession is actually a fairly broad discussion. The aspect studied in this paper is looking at the construction of ownership verbs in the English possession predicate. Viewed from the point of view of the study this paper is grouped into language studies in terms of syntax. The method used is descriptive qualitative method. The theory in this paper refers to the theory of Quirk (1973), Halliday (1985), Cook (1989), and Jackendoff (1977). The data used in this paper are taken from The British National Corpus (http://www.notcorp.ox.ac.uk/). The data collected cont
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6

Felipe, Paulo Henrique de. "Possessive marking strategies in Mehináku (Arawak)." Revista da Anpoll 54, no. 1 (2023): e1611. http://dx.doi.org/10.18309/ranpoll.v54i1.1611.

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In this paper, I describe the possessive constructions in Mehináku, highlighting the types of strategies found in the language, so far, to express possession relationships. I present two major types of possession constructions: (i) nominal (also known as attributive) possession, and (ii) predicative possessive constructions, which involve both the use of nouns and verbs. Regarding nominal possession, Mehináku, like other Arawak languages ​​(PAYNE, 1991; AIKHENVALD, 1999), recognizes a split between inalienably possessed and alienably possessed nouns, expressed through the attribution of differ
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7

Ravinski, Christine. "Possessor Raising in Nuu-chah-nulth." Canadian Journal of Linguistics/Revue canadienne de linguistique 52, no. 1-2 (2007): 167–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0008413100004230.

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AbstractNuu-chah-nulth possessor raising is semantically unrestricted and affects only subjects: subject agreement matches the person and number of the possessor (rather than the possessed subject), and the possessive-marking clitic attaches to the head of the clause (rather than to the possessum). Nuu-chah-nulth possessor raising is analyzed as a syntactic dependency between the possessive clitic in the main clause and the base-generated possessor position within DP. A Possessive Phrase can appear in either the DP or the clausal domain, and the possessive clitic may be generated in either pos
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8

Chappell, Hilary, and Denis Creissels. "Topicality and the typology of predicative possession." Linguistic Typology 23, no. 3 (2019): 467–532. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/lingty-2019-0016.

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Abstract Recent accounts on the typology of predicative possession, including those by Stassen, recognise a Topic Possessive type with the possessee coded like the figure in an existential predication, and the possessor coded as a topic that is not subcategorised by the predicate and is not related to any syntactic position in the comment, literally: As for Possessor, there is Possessee. The Asian region is explicitly singled out as being a Topic Possessive area. On the basis of a sample of 71 languages from the four main language families of continental East and Southeast Asia – Sino-Tibetan,
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9

Karvovskaya, Elena. "On the differences between adnominal and external possession in Ishkashimi." Studies in Language 39, no. 3 (2015): 729–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/sl.39.3.07kar.

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This paper discusses two particles that mark possession in Ishkashimi: -no and -noy. These markers are not in free variation; -noy can only mark adnominal possession, while -no can mark external possession. This will be argued for on the basis of distributional and interpretational differences between the two markers. Unlike the marker -noy, -no can appear in the context of nominal ellipsis and possessive predicates. A -noy-marked possessor has to be adjacent to the possessed noun and precede it; a -no-marked possessor does not have these adjacency requirements. In the context of possessor dou
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10

Deal, Amy Rose. "Possessor Raising." Linguistic Inquiry 44, no. 3 (2013): 391–432. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/ling_a_00133.

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Various languages allow instances of external possession—possessive encoding without a possessive structure in DP. The analysis of these cases has long been a battleground of raising versus control. I provide a new argument from Nez Perce in support of possessor raising of a type thematically parallel to raising to subject. The possessor phrase moves from a possessum-DP-internal position to an athematic A-position within vP. Like raising to subject, this movement is obligatory and does not result in the assignment of a new θ-role to the moving element. A case-driven treatment of possessor rais
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11

Popescu-Ramírez, Liliana, and Liliane Tasmowski-De Ryck. "Thématicité et Possessivité en Roumain." Lingvisticæ Investigationes. International Journal of Linguistics and Language Resources 12, no. 2 (1988): 303–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/li.12.2.05pop.

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It is well known that syntactic configurations such as active vs passive are not interchangeable in all contexts and that they can be interpreted adequately only within the framework of the discourse. It is our contention that precisely the same phenomenon underlies the way in which possession is expressed in Romanian, and we argue that Romanian exploits the possibility of two distinct predicative relationships in this respect: "Possessor possesses possessum" and "possessum belongs to Possessor". A similar explanation is given for the choice between lui and sau with a third person Possessor, a
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12

Oppong, Okrah. "Ͻkere is doing something different in adnominal possession". Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America 8, № 1 (2023): 5464. http://dx.doi.org/10.3765/plsa.v8i1.5464.

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Cross-linguistically, some languages make a morphosyntactic distinction between alienable and inalienable adnominal possession, where alienable possession is more morphologically marked, and inalienable possession shows a tighter structural bond between the possessor and possessee. In this paper, I show that Ɔkere violates these cross-linguistic generalizations differently. I also show that two types of mó occur in the language, one is a possessive marker, and the other is an independent pronoun. Again, I show that the nature of the possessive marker and the independent pronoun leads to a pro-
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13

Rødvand, Linn Iren Sjånes. "Possession in Patani." STUF - Language Typology and Universals 76, no. 3 (2023): 443–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/stuf-2023-2016.

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Abstract This paper provides the first description of the possessive system in Patani, a South Halmahera-West New Guinea language (Austronesian). Possession in Patani involves the interplay of several parameters. Syntactically, there are two broad possessive constructions: direct, and indirect. Morphologically, both constructions make use of pronominal proclitics and possessive suffixes which express the person and number of the possessor. In the direct construction, this possessive marking attaches directly to the noun, whereas the indirect construction makes use of a possessive particle (a r
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14

Creissels, Denis. "Predicative possession in Mande languages." Mandenkan 72 (2025): 45–80. https://doi.org/10.4000/13ewl.

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This article discusses the typology of predicative possession in Mande languages and compares the diversity observed in this domain across the Mande language family with that observed elsewhere in the world, in particular in the language families of West Africa that are in contact with the Mande family. Of the two major types of possessive clauses that have been identified in the world’s languages, possessive clauses that can be rendered literally as ‘In.the.sphere.of Possessor (is) Possessee’ are by far the most widespread type in the Mande language family, whereas possessive clauses projecte
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15

Haddad, Youssef A. "Possessively Construed Attitude Dative Constructions in Lebanese Arabic." Brill’s Journal of Afroasiatic Languages and Linguistics 8, no. 1 (2016): 37–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18776930-00801003.

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Possessive dative constructions—a subcategory of external possession constructions, similar but not identical to the English sentence She looked him in the eye—are a cross-linguistic phenomenon. These structures feature a nominal or pronominal element—in this case, him—that functions semantically as the possessor of a separate DP—eye—and syntactically as a dependent of the verb. Syntactic approaches to possessive dative constructions in such languages as Hebrew and German argue for a movement analysis in which the possessor starts out in the possessum DP before moving to a higher position. Sem
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16

Andersen, Torben. "External possession of body-part nouns in Jumjum: Possessor raising with possessum incorporation." Journal of African Languages and Linguistics 40, no. 2 (2019): 171–203. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/jall-2019-0008.

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Abstract In Jumjum, a Western Nilotic language, some body-part nouns, and only such nouns, may be externally possessed in transitive and antipassive clauses. In these external possessor constructions, the possessor is either the object of a transitive verb or the demoted patient of an antipassive verb. The externally possessed body-part noun is partly incorporated into the verb, as shown by the following properties: It immediately follows the verb, its tone is determined by the final tone of the verb, it may combine with a nominalized verb in a kind of compound, and it does not exhibit the roo
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17

Miyamoto, Yuki. "Possessed and Possessing." Culture and Religion 7, no. 2 (2006): 139–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14755610600975894.

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18

Salamun, Taufik. "PERBANDINGAN POLA KONSTRUKSI POSESIF DIALEK AMBON DENGAN BAHASA INDONESIA BAKU [Comparison of Construction Possessive Pattern of Ambon Dialect with Indonesian Standard]." TOTOBUANG 7, no. 1 (2019): 43. http://dx.doi.org/10.26499/ttbng.v7i1.123.

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This study aims to reconstruct the possessive pattern of the Indonesian language in Ambon dialect with Indonesian standards. This research is descriptive qualitative. The data of this study were derived from the speech of the people of Ambon and surrounding cities who communicate using Ambonese dialect in Indonesian. Indonesian data was obtained from the translation of Ambonese dialects of Indonesian. This research was located in all areas of Ambon City and its surroundings. The time needed by researchers to collect data is for two weeks. The data collection method used is non-participant obse
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19

Worku, Firew Girma. "Possessive Construction in Mursi." Arba Minch University Journal of Culture and Language Studies 1, no. 1 (2022): 49–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.59122/1355c44.

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This paper deals with possessive construction in Mursi, a Nilo-Saharan language spoken by a small group of people located in southwestern, Ethiopia. Mursi has a fairly rich syntactic system for the expression of possession or ownership. A plausible reason for acquiring such a rich expression of syntactic construction ofpossession is that it has both a head and dependent marking system. As a head-dependent marking language, both the head and the dependent are marked by appropriate dependency relation marking morphological elements. The head can be marked with two different morphologies, modific
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20

Аврамова [Avramova], Цветанка [TSvetanka]. "Изразяване на посесивност (притежателност) в производната субстантивна лексика в българския и чешкия език". Studia z Filologii Polskiej i Słowiańskiej 53 (24 грудня 2018): 59–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.11649/sfps.2018.005.

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Expression of possessiveness in derivative substantive vocabulary of the Bulgarian and Czech languagesThe article is dedicated to researching the manifestations of possessiveness in some nouns of the Bulgarian and Czech languages. We start from the definition of possessiveness as a relation between the objects of extralinguistic reality, whereby one is the possessed object (possessum), the other one is its holder (possessor). In possessive semantics, a central place amidst the nouns is assigned to the nomina posessiva. Nevertheless, possessiveness is also expressed by nouns belonging to other
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21

Oliver Frauca, Laia. "De la recerca sobre la por a la por en la recerca. Reflexionant entorn dels sentiments i les percepcions d’inseguretat de les dones en el treball de camp." Documents d'Anàlisi Geogràfica 49 (January 15, 2007): 183–96. https://doi.org/10.5565/rev/dag.1089.

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Aquest article reflexiona entorn de l’expressió de les pors socials en el context acadèmic, en particular, dels sentiments d’inseguretat que experimenta bona part del col·lectiu femení a l’hora de realitzar treball de camp, com a resultat de la seva condició de gènere. Analitzant els canals per mitjà dels quals es construeixen, es transmeten i es reprodueixen les pors de les dones en la societat i com aquestes afecten el desenvolupament de la seva tasca com a investigadores, l’article denuncia les divisions socialment generades del temps i l’espai i les conseqüències que aquesta parcel·lació t
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22

Suárez-Palma, Imanol. "Inalienable possession (and lack thereof) in Spanish." Studies in Hispanic and Lusophone Linguistics 17, no. 1 (2024): 109–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/shll-2024-2005.

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Abstract This paper revisits the phenomenon of inalienable possession between a dative argument and a body-part noun in Spanish. Specifically, it looks at contexts where the inalienable possession interpretation is obligatory, as in constructions containing monoeventive verbs of perception, and those where the inalienable reading becomes optional, namely with bi-eventive predicates denoting a change of state. I offer a possessor raising and applicative hybrid analysis, whereby the inalienable possessor originates inside the body-part DP and raises to the specifier of an applicative head to lic
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23

Grangé, Philippe. "THE EXPRESSION OF POSSESSION IN SOME LANGUAGES OF THE EASTERN LESSER SUNDA ISLANDS." Linguistik Indonesia 33, no. 1 (2015): 35–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.26499/li.v33i1.28.

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The possessor-possessed, or “preposed possessor” syntactic order, has long been considered a typological feature common to many Eastern Lesser Sunda Islands, labelled either “Central-Malayo Polynesian languages” or “East Nusantara languages”, although these groupings do not exactly coincide. In this paper, the syntax and semantism of possession in some languages of the Eastern Lesser Sunda Islands are described. There is a wide variety of possession marking systems in the Eastern Lesser Sunda Islands, from purely analytic languages such as Lio to highly flexional languages such as
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24

Dincă, Daniela, and Ilona Bădescu. "Moyens d’expression de la possession inalienable dans les constructions verbales avec des noms de parties du corps (domaine français-roumain)." Studia Universitatis Babeș-Bolyai Philologia 67, no. 4 (2022): 335–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.24193/subbphilo.2022.4.17.

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" Means of Expressing Inalienable Possession in Verb Structures with Body Part Nouns (French and Romanian). Departing from the verb structures with the possessive dative that express the inalienable possession between a noun that names body parts (Nbp) and its possessor in Romanian (Ro: I-a rupt gâtul. / Fr. Il lui a rompu le cou), we set out to establish a typology of verb structures consisting of two subclasses: (1) Verbs that place the possessor in the possessive dative and the Nbp in the accusative (direct object); (2) verbs that place the Nbp as an adverbial modifier and the possessor in
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25

Gusev, Valentin. "Constructions with a Nominative possessor in the Nganasan language." Rodnoy Yazyk. Linguistic journal, no. 2 (December 2022): 67–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.37892/2313-5816-2022-2-67-88.

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This paper deals with head-marked nominal possessors in Nganasan, i. e., constructions with the possessor in the Nominative and possessive markers on the possessee. It is shown that this construction is only used when the possessor is topical and the possessee is in focus. All other combinations of topic/focus and possessor/possessee with a nominal possessor use the standard dependent-marking construction: the possessor stands in the Genitive and the possessee is unmarked.
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26

Gafter, Roey J. "The Distribution of the Hebrew Possessive Dative Construction: Guided by Unaccusativity or Prominence?" Linguistic Inquiry 45, no. 3 (2014): 482–500. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/ling_a_00164.

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This article challenges the empirical generalization that the possessed element in the Hebrew possessive dative (PD) construction cannot be an external argument ( Borer and Grodzinsky 1986 ), a generalization that has been leveraged in the use of the PD construction as an unaccusativity diagnostic. An acceptability judgment experiment shows that the PD construction is dispreferred when the possessor is less prominent than the possessee on the animacy or definiteness scale; however, it shows no effect of unaccusativity, raising serious doubts regarding the construction’s validity as an unaccusa
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27

Storbeck, Jesse, and Elsi Kaiser. "Possession type affects resolution of possessive pronouns in English VP ellipsis." Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America 3, no. 1 (2018): 52. http://dx.doi.org/10.3765/plsa.v3i1.4346.

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The sentence “Bill washed his car, and John did, too” has two possible interpretations if the overt his refers to Bill: (i) a coreferential interpretation, in which John washed Bill’s car, or (ii) a bound variable interpretation, in which John washed his own car. What guides comprehenders’ selection of one over the other? Previous research has identified factors such as processing economy (e.g. Reuland, 2001) and lexical semantic properties of the verb and possessed noun (e.g. Foley et al., 2003; Ong & Brasoveanu, 2014). We extend research on the contribution of possession type to resoluti
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28

Perangin Angin, Dalan Mehuli. "TWO ATTRIBUTIVE POSSESSIVE CONSTRUCTIONS IN PAGU: THE DOUBLE AND SINGLE MARKING." Linguistik Indonesia 42, no. 2 (2024): 325–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.26499/li.v42i2.628.

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This paper discusses two different attributive possessive constructions in Pagu, a West Papuan language spoken in Halmahera. They can be categorized into double and single marking. Semantically, the former construction allows only human possessor, while the latter both non-human and human – with a restricted use for human on the core kinship relations only. The paper also discusses the definiteness of the possessor or possessee in each construction, which I argue result from the familiarity of both the possessor-possessee after being introduced in the discourse. It also allows either the posse
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29

Krausz, Michael. "The Possessor and the Possessed." International Studies in Philosophy 37, no. 4 (2005): 144–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.5840/intstudphil200537422.

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30

Trye, David, Andreea S. Calude, Ray Harlow, and Te Taka Keegan. "Analysing A/O Possession in Māori-Language Tweets." Languages 9, no. 8 (2024): 271. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/languages9080271.

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This article contributes the first corpus-based study of possession in Māori, the indigenous language of Aotearoa New Zealand. Like most Polynesian languages, Māori has a dual possessive system involving a choice between the so-called A and O categories. While Māori grammars describe these categories in terms of the inherent semantic relationship between the possessum and possessor, there have been no large-scale corpus analyses demonstrating their use in natural contexts. Social media provide invaluable opportunities for such linguistic studies, capturing contemporary language use while allev
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31

Pomázi, Bence. "A three times marked possessive structure in Hungarian." Studia Linguistica Hungarica 33, no. 1 (2021): 5–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.54888/slh.2021.33.5.17.

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The paper presents a unique construction of possessing, in which the fact of the possessing is marked three times. On the regent of the construction (which refers to the possessed thing) there is a possessive suffix, and two other linguistic elements refer to the possessor. Both are personal pronouns, the first is in nominative, the second is in dative case. The study looks through the role of this structure in the secondary grammaticalization of the suffix. The paper suggests that the grammaticalization is not a one way, linear path. First, because there can be junctions in the grammaticaliza
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32

Schapper, Antoinette, and Emily Gasser. "Adnominal possession in the languages of Wallacea: a survey." STUF - Language Typology and Universals 76, no. 3 (2023): 273–329. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/stuf-2023-2012.

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Abstract This article presents a typological survey of patterns of adnominal possession in 85 Austronesian and Papuan languages of Linguistic Wallacea, providing a more granular picture of possessive constructions in the region than previously available. The features treated are possessive word orders, locus of possessive marking, possessive classification systems, and multifunctionality of adnominal possessive markers. Unlike their relatives to the west, the Austronesian languages of Linguistic Wallacea tend to show Possessor-Possessum ordering and have an alienability distinction, often inst
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33

Giancana, Jeffrey. "The "Scourge" of Armed Check Fraud: A Constitutional Framework for Prohibited Possessor Laws." University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform, no. 51.2 (2018): 409. http://dx.doi.org/10.36646/mjlr.51.2.scourge.

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Prohibited possessor statutes have been a part of American law for decades. Put simply, these laws prohibit any person who has been convicted of a felony from possessing a firearm, a prohibition that lasts for the felon’s entire life. The Supreme Court’s modern Second Amendment jurisprudence has held that the right to possess a firearm is a fundamental individual right. In light of this new paradigm, the constitutionality of such broad prohibitions must be called into question—despite the eagerness of courts across the country to dismiss such challenges by pointing to a single line in Heller.
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34

Andersen, Torben. "External possession of body-part nouns in Dinka." Linguistics 57, no. 1 (2019): 127–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/ling-2018-0033.

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Abstract In Dinka, a Western Nilotic language, body-part nouns may be externally possessed. External possession is possible and the default option if the body-part noun is semantically part of a transitive object, an unaccusative subject, or a copula subject. With transitive and ditransitive verbs, the external possessor is object, and with intransitive and copulative verbs, it is subject. Externally possessed body-part nouns have no grammatical relation to the verb, and they are restricted to occurring in dedicated syntactic slots of the clause, adjacent to a slot used by the main verb when t
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35

Kirby, Ian L., and Hande Sevgi. "Plural Possession in Turkish and Sakha." Proceedings of the Workshop on Turkic and Languages in Contact with Turkic 7, no. 1 (2023): 73. http://dx.doi.org/10.3765/ptu.v7i1.5320.

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This paper examines the morphological interaction of possessor agreement and the number of the possessor and possessed noun in Turkish and Sakha, two distantly related Turkic languages. Of particular focus are third-person posses- sors, where both languages can use the regular nominal plural suffix -LAr to index 3PL possessors, and (similar to many Turkic languages) do not allow two instances of -LAr in sequence, resulting in a three-way ambiguity, e.g. Sakha at-tar-ï [horse-PL-3.POSS] a. ‘his/her horses,’ b. ‘their horse,’ c. ‘their horses.’ In Turkish, this ambiguity obtains only with pro-dr
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36

Serdobolskaya, Natalia. "The syntactic position of genitive modifiers in Beserman Udmurt." Faits de Langues 54, no. 1 (2024): 143–65. https://doi.org/10.1163/19589514-54010007.

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Abstract The paper is focused on the syntactic properties of genitive modifiers in Beserman Udmurt. Apart from the canonical genitive construction with obligatory possessive marking, genitive preposed to the head and head-adjacent (not separated by higher constituents), Beserman allows the structures where the genitive is non-adjacent to the possessum, the possessive suffix is absent, and the possessed nominal may be replaced by an anaphoric pronoun or a question word. Following Edygarova (2010) and Usacheva & Arkhangelskiy (2016), I propose to analyze these constructions in terms of exter
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Mohammadirad, Masoud. "Predicative possession across Western Iranian languages." Folia Linguistica 54, no. 3 (2020): 497–526. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/flin-2020-2038.

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Abstract This paper offers a first systematic investigation of predicative possessive constructions across Western Iranian languages. The notion of possession is conceived as a prototypical domain. It is shown that investigated languages are classified into two major areally distributed groups with respect to predicative possessive constructions: (i) “be”-verb languages, (ii) “have”-verb languages. “Have”-possessives, which originated from “action schema”, are argued to have superseded the archaic “be”-possessives, which trigger a non-canonical marking of the possessor argument. However, “have
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Barth, Danielle. "Variation in Matukar Panau kinship terminology." Asia-Pacific Language Variation 5, no. 2 (2019): 138–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/aplv.00004.bar.

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Abstract Referential kinship terms in Matukar Panau (Oceanic, Papua New Guinea) are obligatorily possessed. Traditionally, kinship terms are directly possessed in Oceanic languages (with an obligatory suffix on the root that agrees with the person and number of the possessor). In Matukar Panau, some kinship terms are also indirectly possessed (with a classifier that agrees with the person and number of the possessor). A third pattern shows double-marking of possessors with directly possessed terms co-occurring with a classifier. I present a multivariate analysis of the predictors that influenc
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Benu, Naniana. "Possessive Construction in Uab Meto." RETORIKA: Jurnal Ilmu Bahasa 5, no. 1 (2019): 45–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.22225/jr.5.1.897.45-51.

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This paper is a result of research which is aimed to uncover the structure and marking on the possessive construction in Uab Meto based on morpho-syntax point of view. The data collected for this research were classified into the primary data (observation) and the secondary data (the data that are obtained from texts). The technique employed to analyze the data was descriptive-analytic, and the approach applied was deductive-inductive. The result of the research shows that in Uab Meto, predicative possession is expressed through the verb muiɁ ‘have/has’. In some usages, muiɁ metathezised to mu
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Farkas, Judit, and Gábor Alberti. "The relationship between (in)alienable possession and the (three potential) forms of possessed nouns in Hungarian." Linguistica 56, no. 1 (2016): 111–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.4312/linguistica.56.1.111-125.

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The paper gives a thorough insight into the system of possible forms of (in)alienably possessed nouns in Hungarian. Its point of departure is the group of [Nominative + -j- +A] possessive forms the stem of which has an alternative (morphologically “shorter”) possessive form; such longer possessive forms are claimed to express alienable possession (see den Dikken 2015). We point out that Hungarian deverbal nominals― and especially the groups of T-nouns―play an interesting role in this system via the thematic character of their possessors (given the obvious connection between alienable possessio
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Guerrerom, Lilián. "Yaqui Possessive Constructions: Evidence For External Possession." Amerindia, no. 42 (2020): 75. http://dx.doi.org/10.56551/ffwg7769.

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Wai-Lan Yeung, Victoria, Andrew L. Geers, and Luana Colloca. "Merely Possessing a Placebo Analgesic Improves Analgesia Similar to Using the Placebo Analgesic." Annals of Behavioral Medicine 54, no. 9 (2020): 637–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/abm/kaaa007.

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Abstract Background Placebo analgesia studies generally reported that the actual use of a placebo analgesic reduces pain. Yeung, Geers, and Kam found that the mere possession (without use) of a placebo analgesic also reduces pain. Purpose We investigated the relative effectiveness of using versus possessing a placebo analgesic on pain outcomes. Methods In Study 1a, 120 healthy adults were randomized to either the experimental (EXP) conditions (EXP1: used a placebo analgesic cream, EXP2: possessed a placebo analgesic cream) or control (CO) conditions (CO1: possessed a sham cream, CO2: no cream)
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Haspelmath, Martin. "Explaining alienability contrasts in adpossessive constructions: Predictability vs. iconicity." Zeitschrift für Sprachwissenschaft 36, no. 2 (2017): 193–231. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1042727.

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This paper argues that alienability contrasts in adnominal possessive constructions should not be explained by iconicity of distance, but by predictability due to the higher relative frequency of possessed occurrences of inalienable nouns. While it is true that when there is an alienability split, the alienable construction typically has an additional marker which often separates the possessor from the possessed noun, the broader generalization is that additional marking is found when the possessive relationship is less predictable. This generalization also extends to cases of antipossessive m
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Ron’ko, Roman V. "POSSESSIVE CONSTRUCTIONS WITH PRONOUNS IN SHUGHNI." RSUH/RGGU Bulletin. "Literary Theory. Linguistics. Cultural Studies" Series, no. 5 (2022): 48–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.28995/2686-7249-2022-5-48-66.

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The paper describes possessive constructions with pronouns in Shughni. In this language, possessor can be expressed by personal and demonstrative pronouns, pronouns with the locative postposition and, and constructions including both a standard pronoun and a pronoun marked with a locative marker. I compare these construction types, analyze types of semantic relations between the possessor and the possessee. Besides that, two syntactic types of possessive constructions are distinguished and their syntactic features are described.
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Lipovšek, Frančiška. "O zgradbah eksogene svojilnosti." Jezik in slovstvo 52, no. 1 (2024): 17–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.4312/jis.52.1.17-27.

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External-possession (EP) constructions are characterized by a special syntactic relation between the possessor and the possessee: rather than modifying the possessee within the same noun phrase, the possessor occurs as an independent sentence element. In the European EP prototype, this constituent is a free dative object. Using Slovene examples as the basis for discussion, the article focuses on the syntactic and semantic features of EP constructions and tries to pinpoint the factors conditioning their use. In explaining their syntactic structure, a generative approach is adopted, which is bas
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Schwenter, Scott A., and Kendra V. Dickinson. "A distinct aspectual analysis of predicative possession in Brazilian Portuguese." Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America 5, no. 1 (2020): 242. http://dx.doi.org/10.3765/plsa.v5i1.4702.

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We provide an aspectual analysis of Brazilian Portuguese predicative possessives, ter ('have') NP vs. estar com ('to be with') NP, which have been analyzed as denoting permanent versus temporary possession, respectively. Data include 20th century tokens of estar com NP (n=553) and ter NP (n=2976) from Davies' Corpus do Português. These data show that both possessive constructions can occur with the same temporal/aspectual reference and possessum, but that ter NP has a 0.55 type-token ratio while estar com NP shows significantly lower (p<0.01) productivity (0.41). An online experimental surv
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Argudo Iturriaga, Francisco M., José L. Arias Estero, and Encarnación Ruiz Lara. "Efectes de tenir la primera possessió de la pilota sobre els marcadors parcial i final en els Campionats del Món de Waterpolo de 2005 i 2007." Apunts Educació Física i Esports, no. 105 (December 30, 2011): 54–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.5672/apunts.2014-0983.cat.(2011/4).106.07.

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Gardiner, Shayna. "What's mine is yours: Stable variation and language change in Ancient Egyptian possessive constructions." Canadian Journal of Linguistics/Revue canadienne de linguistique 62, no. 4 (2017): 639–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cnj.2017.35.

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AbstractVariation is described as two or more variants competing for finite resources. In this model, two outcomes are possible: language change or specialization. Specialization can be broken down further: specialization for different functions, and partial specialization – stable variation. In this paper, I analyze the differences between stable variation and language change using the two variables present in Ancient Egyptian possessive constructions. Observing four Egyptian possessive variants, split into two groups with two variants each – clitic possessor variants and full nominal possess
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Monjo i Dalmau, Francesc Joan. "El restabliment de la Companyia de Jesús a València." SCRIPTA. Revista Internacional de Literatura i Cultura Medieval i Moderna 11, no. 11 (2018): 74. http://dx.doi.org/10.7203/scripta.11.12585.

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Resum: L’expulsió de la Companyia de Jesús, decretada per Carles III el 1767, obrí un llarg període de foscor per als jesuïtes hispànics. Tanmateix, el cop de gràcia a l’orde vindria de la mà del papa Climent XIV, que, pressionat per la monarquia espanyola –l’ambaixador del rei hispànic a Roma Moñino recorregué a la coacció i al suborn d’afins al pontífex–, declarà extingida la Companyia el 21 de juliol del 1773. Els jesuïtes suprimits van conrear la propaganda durant més de quaranta anys per tal de revertir la situació. Finalment, el 1814 el papa Pius VII restablí l’orde jesuïta a tot el món
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Lüpke, Friederike. "It’s a split, but is it unaccusativity?" Studies in Language 31, no. 3 (2007): 525–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/sl.31.3.02lup.

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Jalonke, a Mande language of Guinea, exhibits a formal split of intransitive verbs with respect to the possessive construction in which they appear. Whenever the single argument of a nominalized intransitive verb is linked to the possessor of the nominalized verb, an inalienable possessive construction is used with some verbs, and an alienable possessive construction with others. The inalienable possessive construction is also used for nominalized transitive verbs when possessed by their object participants, while the alienable possessive construction is used for transitive verbs possessed by
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