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100791 | Lönngren, Lennart - Valency Structures in RussianValency is traditionally thought of as a property of verbs. The present work is an attempt to explore valency as a property of all kinds of linguistic signs - words, morphemes, and signs with non-phonemic expression. An important distinction is made between semantic and syntactic signs, and amongst semantic signs between signs with and without valency. The basic unit is the "atom", i.e. a predicate together with its actants. The structure of an atom is represented by means of eleven "valency categories". These categories reflect cases and certain related properties. More than 800 valency structures (different combinations of categories) have been identified. A large material illustrating these structures makes up the major part of this book.Lennart Lönngren (born 1942) is professor of Russian linguistics at the University of Tromsø. Tromsø Studies in Linguistics 20. |
NOK 223,00NOK 223,00 Legg til / Add |
100790 | Nesset, Tore- Russian Conjugation RevisitedA Cognitive Approach to Aspects of Russian Verb InflectionEver since Roman Jakobson published his celebrated paper "Russian Conjugation" fifty years ago, the study of verb stem alternations has been pivotal in Russian linguistics. This monograph reviews the literature on the topic and provides a detailed discussion of the distribution of the alternants and their motivation. An attempt is made to capture insights from both the Jakobsonian "one-stem system" and the traditional "two-stem system". The descriptive problems of Russian conjugation are approached from the perspective of Cognitive Grammar, and theoretical questions relating to the application of this framework to morphology are explored. In particular, it is argued that so-called radial categories play a central role in morphology, and that declarative models that place the burden of generalization on surface representations are to be preferred. Tore Nesset (born 1966) is associate professor of Russian linguistics at the University of Tromsø, Norway. He is the author of the monograph Russian Stress (1994), also published by Novus Press. Tromsø Studies in Linguistics 19. | NOK 318,00NOK 318,00 Legg til / Add |
100570 | Nesset, Tore- Russian StressStress as an Inflectional Formative in Russian Noun Paradigms and Bybee’s Cognitive Morphology This monograph is devoted to mobile stress patterns in contemporary Russian noun inflection. A classification model is proposed, and predictability of membership in all classes is given a detailed discussion on the basis of data obtained from written sources, informants and psycholinguistic experiments with nonsense words. The framework employed in the book is Joan L. Bybee’s conception of cognitive morphology. The model’s capacity for accounting for the generalizations about stress is evaluated by comparison with more traditional approaches to morphology, such as Item and Arrangement, Item and Process, Word and Paradigm, and what may be called Priscianic Morphology. Oslo-studier i språkvitenskap 9. | NOK 206,00NOK 206,00 Legg til / Add |
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