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  Armstrong, G. (2)
Corinne Hutchinson; and Grant Armstrong. The syntax and semantics of personal datives in Appalachian English. In Raffaella Zanuttini; and Laurence R. Horn., editor(s), Micro-syntactic variation in North American English, of Oxford Studies in Comparative Syntax, pages 178–214. Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2014.
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Grant Armstrong; and Corinne Hutchinson. The personal dative construction in Appalachian English. 2008.
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  Bosse, S. (1)
Solveig Bosse. A formal semantic approach to personal datives in Southern and Appalachian English. Southern Journal of Linguistics, 38(1): 95–116. 2014.
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  Christian, D. (2)
Donna Christian. The personal dative in Appalachian speech. In Peter Trudgill; and J. K. Chambers., editor(s), Dialects of English: Studies in grammatical variation, of Longman Linguistics Library, pages 13–19. Longman, London, 1991.
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Walt Wolfram; and Donna Christian. Appalachian speech. Center for Applied Linguistics, Arlington, VA, 1976.
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  Conroy, A. (1)
Anastasia M. Conroy. The personal dative in Appalachian English as a reflexive pronoun. University of Maryland Working Papers in Linguistics, 16: 63–88. January 2007.
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  Cournane, A. (1)
Ailís Cournane. Personal datives in Southern American English: Reflexive high applicatives. 2010.
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  Dannenberg, C. (1)
Gert Webelhuth; and Clare J. Dannenberg. Southern American English personal datives: The theoretical significance of dialectal variation. American Speech, 81(1): 31–55. 2006.
doi   link   bibtex   abstract   1 download  
  Gerwin, J. (1)
Johanna Gerwin. Ditransitives in British English dialects. of Topics in English LinguisticsDe Gruyter Mouton, Berlin, 2014.
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  Green, G. (1)
Georgia M Green. Semantics and syntactic regularity. Indiana University Press, Bloomington; London, 1975.
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  Haddad, Y. (3)
Youssef A. Haddad. Binding as co-indexing vs. binding as movement: Evidence from personal datives. Berkeley Linguistics Society (BLS), 39: forthcoming. 2013.
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Youssef A. Haddad. Attitude datives in Lebanese Arabic and the interplay of syntax and pragmatics. Lingua, 145: 65–103. June 2014.
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Youssef A. Haddad. The syntax of Southern American English personal datives: An anti-locality account. Canadian Journal of Linguistics, 56(3): 403–412. 2011.
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  Horn, L. (3)
Laurence R. Horn. "I love me some him": The landscape of non-argument datives. Empirical Issues in Syntax and Semantics, 7: 169–192. September 2008.
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Laurence R. Horn. I love me some datives: Expressive meaning, free datives, and F-implicature. In Daniel Gutzmann; and Hans-Martin Gärtner., editor(s), Beyond expressives: Explorations in use-conditional meaning, of Current Research in the Semantics/Pragmatics Interface, pages 151–199. Brill, Leiden, 2013.
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Jim Wood; Laurence Horn; Raffaella Zanuttini; and Luke Lindemann. The Southern dative presentative meets Mechanical Turk. American Speech, 90(3): 291–320. August 2015.
doi   link   bibtex   abstract  
  Hutchinson, C. (2)
Corinne Hutchinson; and Grant Armstrong. The syntax and semantics of personal datives in Appalachian English. In Raffaella Zanuttini; and Laurence R. Horn., editor(s), Micro-syntactic variation in North American English, of Oxford Studies in Comparative Syntax, pages 178–214. Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2014.
link   bibtex  
Grant Armstrong; and Corinne Hutchinson. The personal dative construction in Appalachian English. 2008.
link   bibtex  
  Lindemann, L. (1)
Jim Wood; Laurence Horn; Raffaella Zanuttini; and Luke Lindemann. The Southern dative presentative meets Mechanical Turk. American Speech, 90(3): 291–320. August 2015.
doi   link   bibtex   abstract  
  Mishoe, M. (1)
Mary Sue Sroda; and Margaret Mishoe. "I jus like to look at me some goats": Dialectal pronominals in Southern English. In 1995.
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  Rotschy McLachlan, L. (1)
Liela Rotschy McLachlan. I love me some Jiminy Glick: The semantic contribution of ‘some’ in personal dative constructions. 2010.
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  Sroda, M. (1)
Mary Sue Sroda; and Margaret Mishoe. "I jus like to look at me some goats": Dialectal pronominals in Southern English. In 1995.
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  Webelhuth, G. (1)
Gert Webelhuth; and Clare J. Dannenberg. Southern American English personal datives: The theoretical significance of dialectal variation. American Speech, 81(1): 31–55. 2006.
doi   link   bibtex   abstract   1 download  
  Wolfram, W. (1)
Walt Wolfram; and Donna Christian. Appalachian speech. Center for Applied Linguistics, Arlington, VA, 1976.
link   bibtex  
  Wood, J. (2)
Jim Wood; and Raffaella Zanuttini. Datives, data and dialect syntax in American English. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics, 3(1): 87. August 2018.
Datives, data and dialect syntax in American English [link]Paper   doi   link   bibtex   abstract   2 downloads  
Jim Wood; Laurence Horn; Raffaella Zanuttini; and Luke Lindemann. The Southern dative presentative meets Mechanical Turk. American Speech, 90(3): 291–320. August 2015.
doi   link   bibtex   abstract  
  Zanuttini, R. (2)
Jim Wood; and Raffaella Zanuttini. Datives, data and dialect syntax in American English. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics, 3(1): 87. August 2018.
Datives, data and dialect syntax in American English [link]Paper   doi   link   bibtex   abstract   2 downloads  
Jim Wood; Laurence Horn; Raffaella Zanuttini; and Luke Lindemann. The Southern dative presentative meets Mechanical Turk. American Speech, 90(3): 291–320. August 2015.
doi   link   bibtex   abstract