Results 231 to 240 of about 47,890,145 (290)
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Microvariation in the Slavic secondary imperfective
Journal of Slavic Linguistics:While secondary imperfectivization (SI) is a prominent phenomenon in Slavic, there is variation in its realization. This study contributes novel cross-Slavic data systematizing our understanding of the distribution and meaning of SI morphology in ...
Dorota Klimek-Jankowska +5 more
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Chinese Journal of Slavic Studies
The study offers a novel analysis of the Proto-Slavic patronymic suffix *-it’ь, drawing on its concise yet foundational treatment in Słownik prasłowiański (1976) and examining its diachronic development and geographical distribution across the Slavic ...
Zoran Spasovski
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The study offers a novel analysis of the Proto-Slavic patronymic suffix *-it’ь, drawing on its concise yet foundational treatment in Słownik prasłowiański (1976) and examining its diachronic development and geographical distribution across the Slavic ...
Zoran Spasovski
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Studies About Languages
The article assesses claims made in the previous studies regarding the increase in the number of identical transitive and intransitive verbs with patient-like arguments, that is, patientively labile (P-labile) verbs, in Macedonian in comparison with ...
Maxim Makartsev +2 more
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The article assesses claims made in the previous studies regarding the increase in the number of identical transitive and intransitive verbs with patient-like arguments, that is, patientively labile (P-labile) verbs, in Macedonian in comparison with ...
Maxim Makartsev +2 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
The Review of Politics, 1954
“Slavic Studies”—the very expression implies their comparative aspect and raises the question: what enables us to refer to Czechs, Slovaks, Poles, Lusatian Sorbs, Slovenes, Croats, Serbs, Macedonians, Bulgarians, Ukrainians, Byelorussians and Russians by the single all-encompassing term, the “Slavic” peoples?
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“Slavic Studies”—the very expression implies their comparative aspect and raises the question: what enables us to refer to Czechs, Slovaks, Poles, Lusatian Sorbs, Slovenes, Croats, Serbs, Macedonians, Bulgarians, Ukrainians, Byelorussians and Russians by the single all-encompassing term, the “Slavic” peoples?
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Slavic Reference Works and the Representation of Slovene: A Case Study
Slovene Linguistic StudiesThe present paper uses the example of the Cambridge Handbook of Slavic Linguistics to elucidate the process of documenting Slavic languages in reference works: the rationale for the project and its contextualization amid other reference works for Slavic ...
D. Sipka, Wayles Browne
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“No Matter Who You are or What Your Business”: NYPL’s Slavic Collections @ 125
Slavic & East European Information ResourcesInitially established at the behest of New York’s diverse Slavic émigré communities, the collections of the NYPL have grown dramatically over the past 125 years.
R. Davis
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Interlingual Slavic Homonymy: Prototypical and Occasional
RUDN Journal of Language Studies, Semiotics and SemanticsThe issues of interlingual Slavic homonymy are being examinedi n a multifaceted way on the material of the East, West and South Slavic languages. Given research problem is one of the most actual in comparative linguistics, translation studies, as well as
Alexandr V. Savchenko +1 more
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Slavic Morphemics in Comparative Studies
2021The comparative study of Slavic morphemics is essential for expanding knowledge on such issues as the typology of the structure of Slavic words and its nature, the resources of Slavic nomination (first of all, morphological word-formation), the modes of adaptation of borrowings, and the semantic potential of morphemic resources of Slavic languages ...
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