Personal information

syntax, German, contrastive linguistics, historical linguistics, generative grammar
Germany

Biography

- born on May 6th, 1986 in Venice (Italy)
- 2007-2010: B.A. in German, English and General Linguistics at Ca' Foscari University of Venice
- 2010-2012: M.A. in German and Theoretical Linguistics at Ca' Foscari University of Venice
- 2013-2016: Ph.D in German Linguistics at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
- 2017-2020: researcher in the project "Lizenzierungsbedingungen für deutsche Verb-Dritt-Sätze in der Diachronie" at Bergische Universität Wuppertal
- 2020-__: lecturer in German linguistics at Bergische Universität Wuppertal

Activities

Employment (3)

Bergische Universität Wuppertal: Wuppertal, Nord-Rhine Westphalia, DE

2017 to present | lecturer and researcher (Fakultät für Geistes- und Kulturwissenschaften)
Employment
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München: Munich, Bavaria, DE

2013 to 2017 | Lecturer and researcher (Department I - Germanistik, Komparatistik, Nordistik, Deutsch als Fremdsprache)
Employment
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

Università Ca' Foscari Venezia: Venice, Veneto, IT

2009 to 2012 | Junior lecturer (Department of Linguistics and Comparative Cultural Studies)
Employment
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

Works (28)

(2012). Where is going to going to go? A generative proposal between diachrony and synchrony. IJL - International Journal of Linguistics 4/1, 90-129.

Journal article
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2013). For a headed analysis of free relatives in German and English: The ‘Free Relative Economy Principle’. The Linguistics Journal 7/1, 273-293.

Journal article
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2021). How large is the left periphery of Present-Day German? A unifying approach to multiply-filled-prefield configurations. Open Linguistics 7/1: 760-801.

Journal article
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2021). Verbspäterstellungen, komplexe Vorfelder und die linke Satzperipherie im Mittel- und Frühneuhochdeutschen. Sprachwissenschaft 46/1: 35-70.

Journal article
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2011). Genitive-dative syncretism in the Balkan Sprachbund: An invitation to discussion. SKASE Journal of Theoretical Linguistics 8/2, 70-93.

Journal article
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2011). The grammaticalization of demonstratives: A comparative analysis. Journal of Universal Language 12/1, 7-46.

Journal article
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2014). Wie viele Jungs haben Anna geküsst? Zum besonderen Status von V2-Relativsätzen im gesprochenen Deutsch. Linguistik Online 67/5, 45-67.

Journal article
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2015). Der seltsame Fall der weil-Sätze mit Verb-Zweit-Wortstellung im Deutschen: Zwischen Norm und Mündlichkeit an der Schnittstelle Syntax-Semantik-Pragmatik. Bavarian Working Papers in Linguistics 4: 1-20.

Working paper
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2015). On post-initial 'aber' and other syntactic transgressions: Some considerations on the nature of V2 in German. Journal of Germanic Linguistics 27/4: 317-365.

Journal article
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2016). Against the flow: On the non-coordinate status of V2 causal clauses in spoken German. In Pereira, Sandra / Pinto, Clara / Pratas, Fernanda (eds.), Coordination and subordination. Form and meaning, 93-118. Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.

Book chapter
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2016). On the question of subordination or coordination in V2-relatives in German. In Reich, Ingo / Speyer, Augustin (Hg.), Linguistische Berichte (= Sonderheft Ko- und Subordination im Deutschen und anderen Sprachen), 99-123. Hamburg: Buske (with Roland Hinterhölzl)

Book chapter
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2017). Der Absentiv im Deutschen und Italienischen: Überlegungen zu einer kontroversen Kategorie. In Meisnitzer, Benjamin / Werner, Martina / Zeman, Sonja (eds.), Im Spiegel der Grammatik. Beiträge zur Theorie sprachlicher Kategorisierung, 121-140. Tübingen: Stauffenburg.

Book chapter
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2017). V2-Einbettung im Spannungsfeld von Hypotaxe und Parataxe. Tübingen: Stauffenburg.

Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2018). Die Janusköpfigkeit des ahd. Konnektors 'wanta' und ihre Relevanz für die korpusbasierte historische Syntaxforschung. Zeitschrift für germanistische Linguistik 46/2: 248-281.

Journal article
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2018). Sind Sprechakte einbettbar? Evidenz aus dem Deutschen und Italienischen. In Leiss, Elisabeth / Zeman, Sonja (eds.), Die Zukunft von Grammatik - Die Grammatik der Zukunft (= SDG, Studien zur Deutschen Grammatik 92), 75-116. Tübingen: Stauffenburg.

Book chapter
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2019). Das komplexe Vorfeld im Mittelhochdeutschen. Eine Fallstudie am Engelthaler Schwesternbuch (14. Jh.). In Schöntag, Roger / Czezior, Patricia (eds.), Studia linguistica et philologica 2, 21-62. München: Ibykos.

Book review
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2019). On splittable aggressively non-D-linked expressions and their correlates in West Germanic. In Topintzi, Nina et al. (eds.), Selected papers from the 23rd International Symposium on Theoretical and Applied Linguistics (ISTAL 23), 88-103. Thessaloniki: Aristotle University of Thessaloniki.

Journal article
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2021). A German expletive gone unnoticed? Some notes on (obligatorily) left-peripheral 'so'. Coyote Papers 23: 11-20.

Journal article
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2021). Generalized and specialized adverbial resumption in Middle High German and beyond. Journal of Historical Syntax 5/2: 1-38.

Journal article
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2021). He then said…: (Understudied) deviations from V2 in Early Germanic. Journal of Historical Syntax 5/17: 1-39 (with Marco Coniglio, Chiara De Bastiani & Eric Fuß).

Journal article
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2021). How theoretical is your (historical) syntax? Towards a typology of Verb-Third in Early Old High German. Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics 24/1: 1-48.

Journal article
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2021). Is German 'warum' so special after all? In Gabriela Soare (Hg.), Why is 'why' unique? Its syntactic and semantic properties, 115-150. Berlin: de Gruyter.

Book chapter
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2021). Review of Gunther De Vogelaer, Dietha Koster & Torsten Leuschner (eds.). 2020. German and Dutch in Contrast. Synchronic, Diachronic and Psycholinguistic Perspectives [= Konvergenz und Divergenz. Sprachvergleichende Studien zum Deutschen]. Berlin: de Gruyter. Glottotheory.

Book review
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2021). Rezension zu Karin Beijering, Gunther Kaltenböck & María Sol Sansiñena (eds.). 2019. Insubordination. Theoretical and Empirical Issues [= Trends in Linguistics. Studies and Monographs [TiLSM] 326]“. Berlin: de Gruyter. Glottotheory 12/1.

Book review
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2021). Some notes on central causal clauses in Venetian. Poznań Studies in Contemporary Linguistics 57/4: 519–572.

Journal article
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2022). Interface phenomena and language change. Where we are and where we are going. In Catasso, Nicholas / Coniglio, Marco / De Bastiani, Chiara (Hg.). Language change at the interfaces. Intrasentential and intersentential phenomena. Amsterdam: John Benjamins (with Marco Coniglio & Chiara De Bastiani).

Book chapter
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2022). Language change at the interfaces. Intrasentential and intersentential phenomena (with Marco Coniglio & Chiara De Bastiani). Amsterdam: John Benjamins.

Edited book
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso

(2022). Review of Michalis Georgiafentis, Giannoula Giannoulopoulou, Maria Koloipoulou & Angeliki Tsokoglou (eds.). 2020. Contrastive Studies in Morphology and Syntax [= Bloomsbury Studies in Theoretical Linguistics]. London & New York: Bloomsbury. Languages in Contrast 22/1: 160-168.

Book review
Source: Self-asserted source
Nicholas Catasso