Linguistik International

Band 10:
Kosta, Peter / B?aszczak, Joanna / Frasek, Jens / Geist, Ljudmila / ?ygis, Marzena (Hrsg.): Investigations into Formal Slavic Linguistics. Contributions of the Fourth European Conference on Formal Description of Slavic Languages – FDSL IV. Held at Potsdam University, November 28-30, 2001. Part 1 and 2. 2 Bände, 911 S. - Frankfurt am Main / Berlin / Bern / Bruxelles / New York / Oxford / Wien: Lang, 2003.
ISBN: 3-631-51588-X

Formal Slavic Linguistics is concerned with explicit description of prosody, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics, information structure and language acquisition or impairments of language (aphasia) of Slavic languages within a certain theoretical framework of Principles and Parameters (Chomsky 1995 passim). But the two parts also illustrate the diversity of approaches we use in attempting to reflect the entire range of subfields within a given theoretical framework of cognitive science.


< Band 10.1 | 10.2 >   Bände pro Seite: alle

Band 10.2:
Part 2. 468 S. - Frankfurt am Main / Berlin / Bern / Bruxelles / New York / Oxford / Wien: Lang, 2003.

 

Inhaltsverzeichnis

V. Syntax
Abels, Klaus:
  *[P clitic]! – Why? S. 443
Avgustinova, Tania:
  Russian Infinitival Existential Constructions from an HPSG Perspective S. 461
Avgustinova, Tania / Uszkoreit, Hans:
  Reconsidering the Relations in Constructions with Non-Verbal Predicates S. 483
Babby, Leonard H.:
  Dative Subjects and Nominative Objects: Infinitives in Russian S. 499
Błaszczak, Joanna:
  Getting Rid of Covert Movement or Getting into Trouble? S. 517
Bošković, Željko:
  On Left Branch Extraction S. 543
Franks, Steven:
  Case Features, Markedness, and Quantification S. 579
Kosta, Peter:
  Adverbs and Negation in Czech S. 601
Kurtes, Svetlana:
  Genus Verbi in Serbo-Croat: A Reanalysis of 'se-verbs' S. 617
Markman, Vita G.:
  On the Syntax and Semantics of the Reflexive and Impersonal Passive -sja-Verbs in Russian: the Role of Aspect S. 633
Molle, Kunka:
  The Way of Using Articles in Bulgarian Binominative Sentences S. 651
Osenova, Petya:
  On Subject-Verb Agreement in Bulgarian (An HPSG-Based Account) S. 661
Paslawska, Alla:
  Negative Polaritätselemente und ihre Lizensierung im Ukrainischen S. 673
Skrabalova, Hana:
  Comitative Constructions in Czech S. 685
Szucsich, Luka:
  The Structure of Relative Clauses in Slavic S. 697
Tisheva, Yovka:
  Bulgarian yes-no Questions with Particles nali and nima S. 715
Tomić, Olga Mišeska:
  The Balkan Slavic Future Tenses with Modal Clitics and Tensed Lexical Verbs S. 731
Veselovská, Ludmila:
  A Note about Nothing S. 745
Zimmermann, Ilse:
  The Categorial Dependence of Structural Cases in Russian S. 759
VI. Semantics
Asic-Kang'ethe, Tijana:
  The PO, NA & U Opposition in Serbian and Its Equivalents in Some Slavic Languages and Kikuyu S. 783
Birjulin, Leonid:
  Russkie distributivye konstrukcii: mehanizmy raspredelenja dejstvija S. 797
Divjak, Dagmar:
  An Implementable View on Russian Modificators S. 815
Frasek, Jens:
  Polish pewn-, Mereology, and Syntax S. 831
Rakhilina, Ekaterina V.:
  Russian Genitive Construction with nomina agentis: Towards a Unified Semantic Description S. 849
Rozwadowska, Bozena:
  Initial Boundary and Telicity in the Semantics of Perfectivity S. 859
Tatevosov, Sergei:
  A Theory of Slavic Aspect and the Russian Delimitative S. 873
Wirth, Dieter:
  Argumentstrukturelle und sonstige Motive für den Einschub des kataphorischen Pronomens to (bei bojat'sja und anderen russischen Verben) S. 893

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