“…Arguably the strongest evidence for word anticipation comes from pre-nominal manipulations, which measure behavioral or neural responses to an article or adjective appearing before a noun (for review, see Kutas, DeLong & Smith, 2011;Van Berkum, 2009). Most studies of this type use gender-marking of pre-nominal articles, such as in Spanish and Dutch, and report differential event-related potential (ERP) responses to articles that mismatch the gender of a highly predictable noun, compared to gender-matching articles (e.g., for Dutch, Otten and Van Berkum, 2009;Van Berkum et al, 2005; for Spanish, Foucart, Martin, Moreno & Costa, 2014;Gianelli & Molinaro, 2018;Martin, Branzi & Bar, 2018;Molinaro, Gianelle, Caffarra & Martin, 2017;Wicha, Bates, Moreno & Kutas, 2003;, 2004. Of particular relevance is a study by Otten and Van Berkum (2009), wherein participants read twosentence mini-stories that contained an article-adjectives-noun combination of which the noun was either predictable (e.g., "de verfijnde maar toch opvallende ketting", thecom sophisticated yet striking necklacecom) or not predictable and of a different gender than the predictable noun (e.g., "het verfijnde maar toch opvallende collier", theneu sophisticated yet striking collarneu).…”