István KENESEI
member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Institute for General and Hungarian Linguistics
István KENESEI•Publications
István KENESEI•Downloads
Series editorship
LingDok [collections of refereed papers in Hungarian by PhD students from all PhD programs in linguistics and related fields in Hungary], Vols. 1-8 (2000-), JATEPress, Szeged.
Articles
“On what really figures in a non‑configurational language,” Groninger Arbeiten zur germanistischen Linguistik, 24. (1984), 28‑54.
“On the role of the agreement morpheme in Hungarian,” Acta Linguistica Hungarica 36. (1986), 109-120.
“Prosodic phonology in Hungarian,” Acta Linguistica Hungarica 39. (1989), 149-193 (co-author: Irene Vogel).
“On the syntactic options of focus,” MS, University of Delaware, Newark, és JATE, Szeged (1993-97).
“Complementation in Finno-Ugric,” in: N. Vincent (ed.) Complementation in the Languages of Europe, Kluwer, Dordrecht (accepted for publication in the Eurotyp series) (1994).
“Functional Categories in Complementation,” in N. Vincent (ed.), Complementation in the Languages of Europe, Kluwer. Dordrecht (accepted for publication in the Eurotyp series; co-author: Jon Ortiz de Urbina) (1994).
“Subordinate clauses,” in: F. Kiefer and K.É. Kiss (eds.), The Syntactic Structure of Hungarian, Academic Press, San Diego, 1994, pp. 275-354.
“Focus and phonological structure,” MS, University of Delaware, Newark (co-author: Irene Vogel) 54pp. (1995)
“On bracketing paradoxes in Hungarian,” ALH 43. (1995/96), 153-173.
“Adjuncts and arguments in VP-focus,” ALH 45. (1998), 61-88.
“Criteria for auxiliaries in Hungarian,” in: Christopher Piñón and Péter Siptár (eds.), Approaches to Hungarian, Vol. 9, Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, 2005, pp. 73-106 (2001).
“Nonfinite clauses in derived nominals,” in: Christopher Piñón and Péter Siptár (eds.), Approaches to Hungarian, Vol. 9, Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, 2005, pp. 161-186.
“Hungarian in focus” (review article), Journal of Linguistics 41/2 (2005), pp. 409-435. (2003).
“Why indefinite pronouns are different“, in: Organizing grammar: Linguistic studies for Henk van Riemsdijk, ed. by Hans Broekhuis, Norbert Corver, Riny Huybregts, Ursula Kleinhenz and Jan Koster, Mouton de Gruyter, Berlin – New York, 2005, 310-318.
“Focus as identification,” in: Valéria Molnár and Susanne Winkler (eds.), The architecture of Focus, Mouton de Gruyter, Berlin – New York, 2006, 137-168.
“Semiwords and Affixoids: The Territory Between Word and Affix” in ALH 54. (2007), 263-293.
“Hungarian as a pluricentric language“, 5pp + 24 slides (2007)
“Quantifiers, negation, and focus on the left periphery in Hungarian“, Lingua 119 (2009), 564-591 (2006) (http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.lingua.2007.11.004.)
“Chomsky’s century” in: Zoltán Vajda (ed.), Within and without culture: Essays in honor of Bálint Rozsnyai, JATEPress, Szeged, 2009, 155-162.
“Negation in syntactic dialects in Hungarian” in: Johan Brandtler, David Håkansson, Stefan Huber and Eva Klingvall (eds.), Discourse & Grammar. A Festschrift in Honor of Valéria Molnár. 2012. Lund: Centre for Languages and Literature, Lund University, pp. 373-386
The Role of Creativity in the Cognitive Turn in Linguistics. International Review of Pragmatics Volume 5, Issue 2, 2013, pp. 271– 292.
On a multifunctional derivational affix: Its use in relational adjectives or nominal modification, and phrasal affixation in Hungarian. Word Structure 7.2 (2014), 214-239, DOI: 10.3366/word.2014.0066
“K. É. Kiss (ed.), The evolution of functional left peripheries in Hungarian syntax” Language 92, 2016 (co-author: Lipták Anikó).
Passive potential affixation: syntax or lexicon? Acta Linguistica Academica Vol. 64 (2017) 1, 45–77 DOI: 10.1556/2062.2017.64.1.2 (co-author: Anikó Lipták). [open access]
Life without word classes: On a new approach to categorization. To appear in: András Bárány, Theresa Biberauer, Jamie Douglas, Sten Vikner (eds.), Nominal Architecture and Its Consequences: Synchronic and Diachronic Perspectives, Cambridge, 2019. (DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.2.34114.27842)
Surprise: nonfinite clause with finite complementizer, In: Judit Gervain – Gergely Csibra – Kristóf Kovács (eds.), A Life in Cognition: Studies in Cognitive Science in Honor of Csaba Pléh. Springer, 2021, 93-107 (társszerző: Szeteli Anna)
How Many Word-Classes Are There After All? Talk presented at the 14th International Morpholpgy Meeting, Budapest, May 13-16, 2010.
The End of Dichotomies? Talk given at the Beyond Dichotomies Conference Budapest, 25-26 October, 2010