Slavic Linguistics: Recent submissions
Now showing items 61-73 of 73
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Хохотнул, схитрил: The Relationship between Semelfactives Formed with -NU- and S- in Russian
(2009-09-04)We know relatively little about the relationship between verbs with the suffix -nu-, such as крикнуть ‘shout once’, and verbs with the prefix s-, such as сглупить ‘do something stupid’ and сходить ‘walk someplace and back ... -
Delimitative Verbs in Russian, Czech and Slavic
(Slavica Publishers, 2003)This article presents a comparative investigation of delimitative verbs prefixed in po- in Russian, Czech and the other Slavic languages. It is shown that po- delimitatives are relatively highly productive in a group of ... -
Distributive Verbs in Serbian and Croatian
(Slavica Publishers, 2003)This article examines the semantic nature of distributive verbs formed with the prefix po- in Serbian and Croatian. The default interpretation of such distributive verbs, that an event sequentially affects one object (or ... -
Expressing Ingressivity in Slavic: The Contextually-Conditioned Imperfective Past vs. the Phase Verb stat' and Procedural za-
(Slavica Publishers, 1999)This article discusses different modes of expressing ingressivity in the Slavic languages – the grammatical expression of ingressivity (by means of imperfective verb forms) and its lexical expression (by means of the use ... -
"Semelfactive" -nǫ- and the Western Aspect Gestalt
(Slavica Publishers, 2001)This article presents a discussion of differences between the Slavic languages regarding the historical productivity of -nǫ- as an aspectual suffix. It is shown that a class of prefixed pf a-stem/n-stem doublets has been ... -
A Short Reference Grammar of Standard Slovene
(SEELRC Reference Grammar Network, 2006)A reference grammar of the Slovene language designed for advanced-level language users and linguists to compare semantic categories across languages. -
Word Prosody in Slovene from a Typological Perspective
(Akademie Verlag, 2003)Slovene is, along with Serbo-Croatian, an example of a pitch-accent language, one of only two remaining in the Slavic language family. Most of the literature on Slovene the data on the word-prosody features of this language ... -
Archaisms and Innovations in the Dialect of Središče (Southeastern Prlekija, Slovenia
(1994)A historical analysis of the phonological and morphophonological features of the dialect of Središče (Slovenia), based on a description by Karol Ozvald, written in the late nineteenth century. -
Review of Greenberg, Marc L., A Historical Phonology of the Slovene Language
(Bemidji State University, 2002) -
Slavic *jazditi ‘to ride’ and its implications for the development of the category of (in)determinacy
(Maribor: Slavistično društvo; Ljubljana: ZRC SAZU, 2006)This paper presents a fresh look at the etymology of the Slavic verb *jazditi ‘ride’ and discusses implications for the rise of the category of determinacy-indeterminacy in the verbs of motion in Slavic which follow from ... -
The Role of Language in the Creation of Identity: Myths in Linguistics among the Peoples of the Former Yugoslavia
(2006-05-23)The paper gives an overview for non-specialist readers of the connection between language and national identity and the mythologization of this connection through linguistic theories with regard to the formation of Yugoslavia ... -
Slovarček središkega govora (na osnovi zapisov Karla Ozvalda)
(Ljubljana: Znanstvenoraziskovalni center Slovenske akademije znanosti in umetnosti, Inštitut za slovenski jezik Frana Ramovša; Lawrence: Hall Center for the Humanities, University of Kansas, 1999)This article contains a glossary of all of the attested forms in four works by the philologist Karol Ozvald (3 of which remain unpublished), written between 1895 and 1904, describing the phonetics, morphology, and lexicon ... -
On the possible Uralic source for the gen. sg. a-stem desinence in Slavic
(Ioshkar-Ola: Mariiskii gosudarstvennyi universitet, 2003)The paper proposes that contact with Finnic languages led to reshaping of the genitive and possessive markers in Proto-Slavic.