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E-raamat: Syntax of Russian

(State University of New York, Stony Brook)
  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Cambridge Syntax Guides
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Oct-2011
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781139118521
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Cambridge Syntax Guides
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Oct-2011
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781139118521
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The study of Russian is of great importance to syntactic theory, due in particular to its unusual case system and its complex word order patterns. This book provides an essential guide to Russian syntax and examines the major syntactic structures of the language. It begins with an overview of verbal and nominal constituents, followed by major clause types, including null-copular and impersonal sentences, WH-questions and their distribution, and relative and subordinate clauses. The syntax behind the rich Russian morphological case system is then described in detail, with focus on both the fairly standard instances of Nominative, Accusative and Dative case as well as the important language-specific uses of the Genitive and Instrumental cases. The book goes on to analyze the syntax of 'free' word order for which Russian is famous. It will be of interest to researchers and students of syntactic theory, of Slavic linguistics and of language typology.

Arvustused

' this book will be an invaluable resource for researchers and students of syntactic theory, of Slavic linguistics, and of language typology The Syntax of Russian makes a significant contribution to the field of Russian language and linguistics and will serve as an important reference source for researchers and students alike.' Journal of Linguistics

Muu info

Winner of AATSEEL Book Prize for Best Contribution to Slavic Linguistics 2013.An essential guide to Russian syntax, which examines major syntactic structures and grammatical puzzles of the language.
Preface ix
Note on transliteration xiv
List of abbreviations and symbols
xv
Part I Basic configurations
1 Verbal phrases
3(31)
1.1 Verbs and their arguments
3(2)
1.2 Building syntactic structure
5(7)
1.3 Selection and subordination
12(2)
1.4 Thematic relations
14(2)
1.5 Verbal configurations and VP/vP constituency
16(9)
1.6 Interim summary
25(1)
1.7 Infinitivals and other non-finite clauses
26(4)
1.8 An overview of Russian verbal aspect
30(1)
1.9 Extended verbal functional structure
31(3)
2 Nominal phrases
34(39)
2.1 The basic structure of NPs
34(8)
2.2 The DP Hypothesis
42(9)
2.3 Nominal arguments
51(11)
2.4 Extraction from NP/DP
62(3)
2.5 Predicate nominals
65(3)
2.6 Adjectival phrases
68(3)
2.7 Summary
71(2)
3 Types of clauses
73(50)
3.1 Main clauses
73(11)
3.2 Subordinate clauses
84(7)
3.3 Wh-structures
91(18)
3.4 Small clauses, infinitives, and gerunds
109(6)
3.5 Impersonals
115(3)
3.6 Summary
118(5)
Part II Case
4 Core cases of Russian case
123(51)
4.1 Nominative case
124(5)
4.2 Accusative objects
129(11)
4.3 VP-internal asymmetries
140(11)
4.4 Dative inside VP and VP-internal case issues
151(9)
4.5 Summary of VP-internal asymmetries
160(1)
4.6 Dative Experiencers
161(11)
4.7 Summary of core case structures
172(2)
5 More cases of Russian case: Predicate Instrumental, Quantificational Genitive and others ...
174(63)
5.1 Case on predicates
175(24)
5.2 Core instances of structural Genitive case
199(15)
5.3 Extending the Q analysis of Genitive
214(4)
5.4 Case on adverbials
218(9)
5.5 Case in nominalizations
227(1)
5.6 Remarks on case assignment
228(4)
5.7 Summary
232(5)
Part III Word order
6 A descriptive overview of Russian word order
237(55)
6.1 "Grammatical" (neutral, basic, unmarked) word order
238(19)
6.2 "Communicative" (marked, non-neutral, derived) word order
257(8)
6.3 Word order in generic sentences
265(1)
6.4 Topic/Focus structure and word order variation
266(19)
6.5 Remarks on Topic/Focus structure
285(2)
6.6 Remarks on Russian scope and surface word order
287(2)
6.7 Summary
289(3)
7 Theoretical issues in Russian word order
292(54)
7.1 Free word order, movement and optionality
292(18)
7.2 Mechanisms
310(6)
7.3 Motivation
316(16)
7.4 Sample derivations
332(12)
7.5 The nature of the FF interface
344(1)
7.6 Summary
345(1)
References 346(22)
Index 368
John Frederick Bailyn is Professor of Linguistics at Stony Brook University. He is the author of numerous articles and edited volumes on formal Slavic linguistics especially in the areas of case, word order, functional categories, syntactic microvariation and binding.