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Clitic doubling in the Balkan languages

2008
This volume is a collection of articles on clitic doubling, a phenomenon that has preoccupied generative linguists since the 1980s, when its theoretical importance was noted. Clitic doubling is prevalent in the Balkan languages. However, generative studies initially dealt with its properties in Romance languages, with the Balkan patterns coming ...
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Balkan Languages (Illyrian, Thracian and Daco-Moesian)

1982
Applied to language, the name 'Illyrian' is a very ambiguous term. Until recently it was generally admitted that the Thracian linguistic territory covered the whole eastern half of the Balkan peninsula from the Aegean sea, east of the mouth of the Axius, to the upper Tisia and Hierasus north of the Danube. The linguistic evidence available for Thracian
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Source Analysis of Turkism in the Balkan Languages

Iasaýı ýnıversıtetіnіń habarshysy
The connection of Turkic tribes with the peoples of the Balkan Peninsula has a long history. With the conquest of the Ottoman Empire, the influence of the Turks on the countries living in the Balkan region increased, and this situation led to significant changes for the Balkan peoples. Words of Turkic origin in the Balkan languages became the basis for
R.A. Avakova, A.K. Koksegenov
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The Language of Walls Along the Balkan Route

Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies, 2017
ABSTRACTAre border walls and fences becoming an increasingly accepted and legitimate way of coping with the challenges of the refugee crisis and mass migration in Europe? The article addresses this question by examining how Serbian and Croatian public intellectuals reacted to the dramatic impact of Hungary's decision to fortify its southern border in ...
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Introduction to Section Two: Languages and Language Policies in the Balkans

2013
Language problems have a central place in attempts to study and understand the Balkans. Balkan studies, as an academic discipline, started with linguistic studies, and linguistics remains one of the core branches in this field. This chapter focuses on political implications of the different language reforms and policies.
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"Balkanisms" in the South Slavic Languages

The Slavic and East European Journal, 1962
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