title = {Predicative possession in revived Cornish},
booktitle = {Possession in languages of Europe and north and central Asia},
author = {Arbes, Deborah},
editor = {Johanson, Lars and Mazzitelli, Lidia Federica and Nevskaya, Irina},
date = {2019},
pages = {27--84},
publisher = {John Benjamins},
location = {Amsterdam},
abstract = {This study introduces the possessive schemas of revived Cornish. By means of a survey and interviews with 25 fluent speakers and a corpus study I identified several possessive schemas being employed for different purposes due to semantic and structural reasons. Possession splits, which are also attested for the other Brythonic languages (Stolz et al. 2008), occur for the distinction of temporary possession and the possession of illnesses. Furthermore, the speakers may be developing a new form to express the possession of abstract nouns by employing the short form of bos `to be' and the preposition dhe `to'. For the development of this form the history of interrupted language transmission and the use of Cornish by New Speakers are relevant factors.},
keywords = {corn:revling,cornish},
file = {C\:\\Users\\3055822\\OneDrive - Queen's University Belfast\\readings\\arbes-2019.pdf}
}
@book{Bannister1871,
title = {A glossary of Cornish names},
author = {Bannister, John},
@ -1588,7 +1602,6 @@
author = {Payton, Philip},
editor = {Black, R. and Gillies, William and \'O Maolalaigh, R.},
date = {1999},
series = {Celtic connections: Proceedings of the tenth international congress of Celtic studies},