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Names of guelder rose (Viburnum) in Finno-Ugric Languages

Sibirskiy filologicheskiy zhurnal, 2022
The paper discusses the folk names of guelder rose (Viburnum) in the Finno-Ugric languages, with more than a hundred phytonyms having been studied to reveal their origin, areal distribution, and the lexical nomination of Viburnum according to various features.
Igor Brodsky
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LFG and Finno-Ugric languages

2023
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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ON THE PROBLEM OF CLASSIFICATION OF COMPLEX SENTENCES IN FINNO-UGRIC LANGUAGES (Based on the Permian and Volga Languages)

Historical and cultural heritage
The article is devoted to the systematization of the domestic and foreign linguists’ scientific researches on the problem of delimiting complex sentences, as well as analysis of the historical development of classification approaches to complex sentences
A. F. Utkina
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Equative-approximative markers in the Finno-Ugric languages: Interaction with quantitative scales and the development of ambiguity

Voprosy jazykoznanija
The paper is based on data from four Finno-Ugric languages (Udmurt, Hill Mari, Moksha, and Khanty). It deals with markers that can perform at least two functions: on the one hand, they can mark the standard of comparison in equative constructions; on the
M. Winkler
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Nursery words in the Finno-Ugric languages ​​of the Ural-Volga region: functional-semantic aspect

Historical and cultural heritage
The article examines the so-called nursery words in Finno-Ugric languages ​​from the point of view of their functioning and semantics. Children's words constitute a specialized lexicon of a special linguistic register - speech addressed to children.
V. A. Ivanov
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Number of Innovations in Kazakh Dictionaries of the Eighteenth Century in Comparison with Those of Other Turkic and Finno-Ugric Languages

European Journal of Language and Culture Studies
The analysis of the dictionary published by P. S. Pallas makes it possible to clarify the chronology of changes in Kazakh dialects. The Kazakh dictionary of P. S. Pallas is important evidence that PTu *č was still preserved in the 18th century in Kazakh,
J. Normanskaja
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First Language Acquisition in Finno-Ugric Languages

This book is the first comprehensive state-of-the-art overview of the first language acquisition of four Finno-Ugric languages: Estonian, Finnish, Hungarian, and North Saami. Ten chapters review research on phonological, lexical, and grammatical development, bringing the research within the language family into one source, enabling easy access to ...
Virve-Anneli Vihman   +2 more
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Finno-Ugric World(s) and “Language Brotherhood”

2019
Finno-Ugric countries are represented by Finland, Estonia, Hungary, and Russia. While there is a discussion on the Finno-Ugric world existence, Finno-Ugric cooperation is taking place in one form or another. Primarily, Finno-Ugrians collaborate in the sphere of culture and education. There are some NGOs aiming at developing smaller Finno-Ugric nations.
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