Results 51 to 60 of about 2,539 (179)
Comparative analysis of tourism potential of the Finno-Ugric republics: Mordovia and Mari El
Introduction. Today, much attention is paid to the study and effectiveness of the tourism potential of the territory. Such territories are regions having a common ethnic identity. In Russia, these are Finno-Ugric federal entities.
Marina A. Zhulinа +3 more
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Abstract Background It is important to map the clinical competence of newly graduated nurses in Nordic countries. The use of a common Nordic instrument could provide insights into nurses' levels of self‐assessed clinical competence and perceptions of their need for professional development.
Anna Anåker +7 more
wiley +1 more source
Ethnosport as a way to actualize ethnoculture (on the example of Finno-Ugric peoples)
Introduction. The article explores the role and place of ethnosport in the national culture as an important factor in returning to authenticity in order to preserve the identity of ethnic groups. Materials and Methods.
Elena N. Lomshina +2 more
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WE…WITH ANNA: THE INCLUSORY PLURAL PRONOMINAL CONSTRUCTION IN FINNISH AND FENNO‐SWEDISH*
Abstract This article provides a syntactic analysis of the inclusory plural pronominal construction in Fenno‐Swedish and Finnish. In this construction, a plural pronoun has a singular reading: vi …med Anna (literally “we …with Anna”) means ‘Anna and I’. In addition to the plural pronoun, the construction includes a comitative PP.
Klaus Kurki
wiley +1 more source
Hipoteza Witolda Mańczaka o ugrofińskim substracie w językach bałtyckich
Witold Mańczak’s Hypothesis about the Finno-Ugric Substrate in the Baltic Languages The paper discusses Witold Mańczak’s hypothesis concerning a Finnic (particularly Balto-Finnic) substrate in the Baltic languages (Mańczak 1990: 29–38; 1993: 151; 2008:
Krzysztof Tomasz Witczak
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Negation in Finno-Ugric: an introduction
The study of negation has seen recent developments in various directions, which shed a new light on the problem. From all sides, that is the syntactic, the semantic and pragmatic points of view, recent proposals come to challenge the by now standard views on negation in natural languages that developed within the last two decades of linguistic study ...
openaire +2 more sources
In this work I explore the semantics of two case forms of the Finnish quantifier moni ‘many’: the regular nominative moni and the regular partitive monta [mon-ta many-PARTITIVE], which however has taken on a function similar to that of the nominative of ...
Tuomas Huumo
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The chapter discusses some salient, sometimes competing, LFG analyses of a variety of (morpho-)syntactic phenomena in Finno-Ugric languages, with occasional glimpses at alternative generative approaches and at some related phenomena in languages belonging to Samoyedic, the other major branch of Uralic languages.
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Expression of Stimuli in Buryat Emotion Causation Constructions
Goals. This paper discusses strategies of expressing Stimuli in Buryat emotive causative constructions. Results. We argue that a series of such constructions can be seen as a system that allows the speaker to put different components of the Stimulus ...
Elena K. Skribnik
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Finno-Permic Phytonymic Portraits: Centaurea
The paper provides a phytonymic portrait of Centaurea (cornflower) in the Finno-Permic languages that form a branch of the Finno-Ugric language family, the other being that of the Ugric languages.
Igor Brodsky
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