- Published: 6 February 2024
- ISBN: 9780262551090
- Imprint: MIT Press Academic
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 472
- RRP: $95.00
Building and Interpreting Possession Sentences

















- Published: 6 February 2024
- ISBN: 9780262551090
- Imprint: MIT Press Academic
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 472
- RRP: $95.00
"This book is a refreshingly new study on variation in the morphosyntax of possession. Myler's approach artfully combines typological investigation and descriptive work on underrepresented languages with sophisticated theoretical morphology, syntax, and semantics to arrive at a compelling analysis. Engagingly written and carefully argued, this book touches on fundamental issues and constitutes a benchmark not only on the topic of possession, but far more broadly on the questions of how attested cross-linguistic variation should be modeled, and how such variation may be constrained."
--Jonathan Bobaljik, Professor of Linguistics, University of Connecticut
"Myler builds a system for modeling cross-linguistic variation in the famous HAVE/BE alternation, and supports that system with data from a broad gamut of languages, including his own fieldwork on Quechua dialects. This is the book every student of the HAVE/BE alternation should start with. There is no more comprehensive illustration of how the HAVE/BE alternation can be used to brighten the murkiest problems in the syntax of argument structure."
--Kyle Johnson, Professor, University of Massachusetts at Amherst
"Combining original fieldwork on Quechua with a cutting-edge command of argument structure, Myler has produced an innovative account of possession that highlights and resolves an intriguing contradiction in its crosslinguistic character. His balance of clean theory and powerful typology will have scholars returning to this work for years to come."
--Daniel Harbour, Professor of the Cognitive Science of Language, Queen Mary University of London; author of Impossible Persons