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E-raamat: Scalarity in the Verbal Domain: The Case of Verbal Prefixation in Russian

(Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam)
  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 22-Oct-2015
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781316420034
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 22-Oct-2015
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781316420034
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"Verbal prefixes in Slavic languages remain an intricate and puzzling phenomenon, raising questions about whether their behavior is governed by a systematic pattern, and if their attachment is subject to any kind of uniform semantic system. Olga Kagan offers a new unified analysis of Russian verbal prefixes which combines a formal semantic approach with detailed discussion of data. The book addresses two vital issues, both of which play an important role in modern linguistic research: the role of scalarity in natural language and, more specifically, within the verbal domain; and Slavic verbal prefixation. Accessibly written and illustrated with numerous examples, Scalarity in the Verbal Domain is important reading for researchers and students of formal semantics, cognitive linguistics and Slavic languages"--

Arvustused

'The scale hypothesis brings new life into the perennial discussion of whether it is possible to assign verbal prefixes with a uniform meaning despite their apparent polysemy. Kagan succeeds with her scalar approach in formulating a precise semantics for various prefixes in Russian. This important contribution to the field will certainly shape the discussion among semanticists and Slavicists alike in the years to come.' Atle Grønn, Universitetet i Oslo 'Most noticeably, the monograph is written in a clear, accessible language, it is perfectly structured, and the argumentation is thorough and transparent. The work is based on two semantic approaches: formal and cognitive. This makes the potential audience of the book fairly large and versatile.' Eugenia Romanova, The Linguist List (linguistlist.org)

Muu info

Proposes a new analytical approach to the semantics of Russian verbal prefixes, using modern theoretical tools to explore wide-ranging data.
List of figures
viii
List of tables
ix
Acknowledgments x
Introduction 1(3)
1 Scalarity and verbal prefixation
4(40)
1.1 Introduction
4(1)
1.2 Scales in linguistics
5(11)
1.3 Russian verbal prefixes
16(13)
1.4 Verbal prefixes: properties and classifications
29(15)
2 The prefixes po-, na- and pro-
44(26)
2.1 Introduction
44(2)
2.2 The prefix po-
46(6)
2.3 The prefix na-
52(5)
2.4 The prefix pro-
57(11)
2.5 Pro- and po-: a comparison
68(2)
3 The prefixes do-, nedo- and pri-
70(25)
3.1 The prefix do-
70(11)
3.2 The prefix nedo-
81(10)
3.3 Restricting the result state: the prefix pri-
91(4)
4 The prefixes pod- and pere-
95(59)
4.1 The prefix pod-
95(23)
4.2 The prefix pere-
118(36)
5 The prefixes ot- and za-
154(23)
5.1 The prefix ot-
154(11)
5.2 The prefix za-
165(12)
6 Prefixes characterized by stronger restrictions
177(18)
6.1 The prefix pred-
177(3)
6.2 The prefix v-
180(1)
6.3 The prefix pre-
181(2)
6.4 The prefix niz-
183(1)
6.5 The prefix nad-
184(1)
6.6 The prefixes de- and dis-
185(1)
6.7 The prefix vz-
186(1)
6.8 The prefix iz-
187(8)
7 The Scale Hypothesis: principles and parameters
195(27)
7.1 Scale dimensions
195(16)
7.2 Relations
211(1)
7.3 Standard of comparison
212(4)
7.4 Properties of degrees
216(1)
7.5 The relation between a degree and an event
216(3)
7.6 The lexical/superlexical distinction
219(1)
7.7 Summary
220(2)
8 Prefixational genitive
222(23)
8.1 Prefixational genitive: an introduction
222(3)
8.2 Semantics of genitive objects
225(4)
8.3 Building the semantic contrasts
229(5)
8.4 Further issues
234(11)
Conclusion
241(4)
Appendices
245(11)
1 Changes along different scales
245(4)
1.1 Path scales
245(1)
1.2 Time scale
246(1)
1.3 Volume/extent scales
247(2)
2 Compositional semantics of prefixed verbs
249(7)
2.1 The prefix pod-
249(1)
2.2 The prefix nedo-
250(1)
2.3 The prefix do-
251(1)
2.4 The prefix pere-: several examples
252(4)
Bibliography 256(7)
Index 263
Olga Kagan is a lecturer at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev.