
Slavic Languages in the Perspective of Formal Grammar
Proceedings of FDSL 10.5, Brno 2014
Peter Lang Verlag
Published on 30. August 2015
Book
Hardback
364 pages
978-3-631-66251-9 (ISBN)
Description
The volume comprises papers that were presented at the 14th European conference on «Formal Description of Slavic Languages 10.5» at Masaryk University in Brno, Czech Republic. The conference focuses on formal approaches to Slavic phonology, morphology, syntax and semantics. The present contributions describe interesting data patterns found in Slavic languages and analyze them from the perspective of formal grammar, including generative syntax, Distributed Morphology, formal semantics and others.
More details
Series
Edition
New edition
Language
English
Place of publication
Berlin
Germany
Edition type
New edition
Dimensions
Height: 21 cm
Width: 14.8 cm
Weight
570 gr
ISBN-13
978-3-631-66251-9 (9783631662519)
DOI
10.3726/978-3-653-05348-7
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Markéta Ziková and Pavel Caha are assistant professors at the Department of Czech Language at Masaryk University in Brno, Czech Republic.
Mojmír Docekal is an assistant professor at the Department of Linguistics at Masaryk University.
Content
Contents: Al?na Aks?nova: Nominal Partitive Constructions in Russian - Jitka Bartosova: Semantic Analysis of Czech Demonstrative Pronoun TO - Muamera Begovic/Nadira Aljovic: Accounting for Agreement Patterns in Coordinate Noun Phrases with a Shared Modifier - Petr Biskup: On (Non-)Compositionality of Prefixed Verbs - Zeljko Boskovic: Deducing the Generalized XP Constraint from Phasal Spell-out - Zeljko Boskovic/I-Ta Chris Hsieh: On the Semantics of the NP-Internal Word Order: Chinese vs Serbo-Croatian - Tsvetana Dimitrova/Svetla Koeva: Rule-Based Person Named Entity Recognition for Bulgarian - Jakub Dotlacil: Why is Distributivity So Hard? New Evidence from Distributive Markers and Licensors in Czech - Guillaume Enguehard: The Underlying Representation of the Russian Suffix -va - Pavel Kosek: Development of Word Order of Preterit Auxiliary Clitics in the Old Czech Bibles - Petra Mismas: Wh-in Situ in a Multiple Wh-fronting Language - Jeffrey Keith Parrott: Gender Impoverishment in Czech, Slavic, and beyond - Vladimir Petkevic: Genitive in Contemporary Czech from the Perspective of Morphological Tagging and Parsing - Privoznov Dmitry: Participle Passives and Passive Participles in Russian: Aspect - Eugenia Romanova: Possible and Impossible Cases of Possessive Perfect - Olga Steriopolo: Expressive Morphology in Russian and Other Languages - Marcin Wagiel: The Story of Polish Para: From a Group Noun to a Measure Word and Indefinite Quantifier - Jacek Witkos/Dominika Dziubala-Szrejbrowska: On delayed Transfer and a Nano-syntax inspired Account of Genitive of Quantification.