
Studies in Formal Slavic Phonology, Morphology, Syntax, Semantics and Information Structure
Proceedings of FDSL 7, Leipzig 2007
Peter Lang Verlag
Published on 8. September 2009
Book
Paperback/Softback
426 pages
978-3-631-57788-2 (ISBN)
Description
The proceedings of FDSL 7, Leipzig 2007, offer current formal investigations into Slavic morphology, semantics, syntax and information structure. In addition to the main conference, FDSL 7 saw the first special Workshop on Slavic Phonology initiated by Tobias Scheer. Some of the papers presented at that workshop are included in this volume as well. The analyses published in this volume address the following Slavic languages: Bulgarian, Czech, Macedonian, Old Church Slavonic, Polish, Russian, Serbian and Serbo-Croatian. FDSL - the European forum for the formal description of Slavic languages - was called into being in 1995. The FDSL-conferences take place biannually in Leipzig and Potsdam.
More details
Series
Edition
New edition
Language
English
Place of publication
Berlin
Germany
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Edition type
New edition
Illustrations
num tables and graphs
Dimensions
Height: 210 mm
Width: 148 mm
Thickness: 24 mm
Weight
563 gr
ISBN-13
978-3-631-57788-2 (9783631577882)
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
The Editors: Gerhild Zybatow is professor of Slavic Linguistics at the Slavic Department at Leipzig University.
Uwe Junghanns is professor of Slavic Linguistics at the Slavic Department at the University Göttingen.
Denisa Lenertová and Petr Biskup hold research positions at the Slavic department at Leipzig University.
Content
Contents: Petr Biskup: Prefixes as Prepositions and Multiple Cases - Pavel Caha: Czech Syncretism and Blake's Hierarchy Meet the Functional Sequence - Pavel Caha/Lucie Medova: Czech Adverbs as Case-marked Adjectives - Natalia Fitzgibbons: N-Words and Negative Heads in Russian - Ekaterina Pshehotskaya: Stems and Prefixes: Spray/Load Alternation in Russian - Anna Bondaruk: Constraints on Predicate Clefting in Polish - Zeljko Boskovic: On Relativization Strategies and Resumptive Pronouns - Milja Curcin: Dissociating the Impersonal from the Passive in Serbian and Croatian - Marina Dyakonova: Russian Double Object Constructions Revisited - David Erschler: On Case Conflicts in Russian: An Optimality-Theoretic Approach - Jutta M. Hartmann/Natasa Milicevic: Case Alternations in Serbian Existentials - Hakyung Jung: Ergativity in North Russian: The Structure of the be-Perfect with a Nominalized Verb - Uwe Junghanns/Denisa Lenertova: On the Status of na Marking Indirect Objects in Bulgarian - Katarzyna Miechowicz-Mathiasen: There is no Independent EPP in Slavic, there are only EPP-effects - Krzysztof Migdalski: On the Emergence of Second-Position Cliticization in Slavic - Alexander Podobryaev: <<Postposition Stranding>> and Related Phenomena in Russian - Luka Szucsich: Obviation and Feature Sharing in Subjunctive Clauses - Barbara Tomaszewicz: Subjunctive Mood in Polish - Jacek Witkos: Movement, Case Transmission and Case Independence in Polish Control - Anton Zimmerling: Dative Subjects and Semi-Expletive Pronouns in Russian - Mojmir Docekal: Only and Bound Variables in Czech - Elzbieta Hajnicz: Towards Extending Syntactic Valence Dictionary for Polish with Semantic Categories - Veran Stanojevic/Tijana Asic: Towards a Formal Semantics of Some Verbal Tenses in Serbian - Ewa Willim: On the Semantics and Syntax of (Prefixed) Verbs of Directed Motion in Polish - Vadim Kimmelman: On the Interpretation of eto in So-called eto-clefts - Radek Simik: The Syntax, Semantics, and Pragmatics of the Focus Particle to in Czech - Sarka Zikanova/Miroslav Tynovsky: Identification of Topic and Focus in Czech: Comparative Evaluation on Prague Dependency Treebank - Bistra Andreeva: Towards the Intonational Phonology of the Sofia Variety of Bulgarian - Morena Danieli/Beata Dobrzynska/Alberto Pacciotti/Elena Cabrio: Prosodic Phrasing in a Polish Text-to-Speech System - Vera Gribanova: Phonological Evidence for a Distinction between Russian Prepositions and Prefixes - Ora Matushansky: On the Featural Composition of the Russian Back Yer - Tobias Scheer: Syllabic and Trapped Consonants in the Light of Branching Onsets and Licensing Scales.