Results 91 to 100 of about 825 (111)
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Balkan Sprachbund Morpho-Syntactic Features

Studies in Natural Language and Linguistic Theory, 2006
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Language contact in the Balkan Sprachbund

Language Ecology, 2020
AbstractThis study investigates the meaning-form interface in the BalkanSprachbund(BS), by researching five different languages: Italian, Russian,Bulgarian, Romanian, and Greek. I consider two models that account for recurring properties of the relevant languages in theSprachbund: convergence and diglossia.
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Balkan Sprachbund. Early evidence in Greek

2014
The Balkan Sprachbund is a well-known linguistic area largely identifiable with the Balkans, which has over the centuries been the stage of complex historico-political and social events resulting in situations of bi- or multilingualism. Consequently, Balkan languages, including Mod. Gk., share striking structural convergences – so-called ‘Balkanisms’ –
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Borrowing of slavic lexical elements in the languages of the balkan sprachbund. Lexeme KOST

Issues in Spoken Communication
The article analyzes the process of borrowing, integrating and adapting the Slavic word кост and its derivatives in the Balkan Sprachbund. The conditions and areas of borrowing, contexts of functioning, dynamics and variability in the formal-semantic appearance of the borrowed lexical item are examined. The development of the somatism кост, established
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The Xenology of the Powder Keg of Europe: the Reflection of the Peculiarities of the Friend Oo Foe Dichotomy intThe Balkan Model of the World in the Xenopejorative Vocabulary of the Languages of The Balkan Sprachbund. Articulation of Issue

The Russian Journal of Cultural Studies and Communication
This article discusses the reflection of the features of the “friend or foe” dichotomy in the Balkan model of the world in the xenologic pejorative vocabulary of the Balkan sprachbund languages: Albanian, Aromanian, Bulgarian, Modern Greek, Macedonian, Romanian and Serbo-Croatian.
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Reassessing Sprachbunds: A View from the Balkans

2017
Victor A. Friedman, Brian D. Joseph
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