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1
Antemurale innovationis: Clausal complementation in the Slovene Mura River (Prekmurje) dialect and its Balkan parallels
Greenberg, Marc L.. - : De Gruyter Mouton, 2022
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2
Foreword ; Adnan Čirgić. Dialectology of the Montenegrin Language.
Greenberg, Marc L.. - : Lexington Books, 2021
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3
Bivša Jugoslavija kao raskršće jezičkih zajednica i neke paralele na njenoj periferiji ; The former Yugoslavia as a crossroads of Sprachbunds and some parallels on its periphery
Greenberg, Marc L.; Grinberg, Mark L.. - : Fakultet za crnogorski jezik i književnost, 2021
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4
Doing Slavic linguistics in the US today
Greenberg, Marc L.. - : The Japan Society for the Study of Slavic Languages and Literatures, Tokyo, 2021
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5
Online Conflict Discourse, Identity, and the Social Imagination of Silesian Minority in Poland
Borowski, Krzysztof. - : University of Kansas, 2020
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6
The Western South Slavic change l > o/ a and attendant phenomena: diachronic, diatopic, terminological, and typological considerations
Greenberg, Marc L.. - : Sveučilište u Zadru, Matica hrvatska, Ogranak Matice hrvatske u Zadru, 2020
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7
Zakaj ne bi bila oboje hkrati?
Greenberg, Marc L.; Mukics, Dusán. - : Zveza Slovencev na Madžarskem, 2020
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8
Slovene Linguistics from Across the Pond. A Transatlantic View ; Slovenistika prek luže. Prekoatlantski pogled
Greenberg, Marc L.. - : Slovenska akademija znanosti in umetnosti, 2020
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9
Serbo-Croatian and South Slavic Languages
Greenberg, Marc L.. - : Fitzroy Dearborn, 2019
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10
Notes on a New Dialectology of Montenegrin
Greenberg, Marc L.. - : Slavica, 2019
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11
Indo-European 5: Slavic
Greenberg, Marc L.. - : Fitzroy Dearborn, 2019
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12
Managing Small Language Programs in Changing Times
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13
Slavic Dialectology: A Survey of Research since 1989
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14
Slavic
In: The Indo-European languages (London, 2017), p. 519-551
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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15
Supplemental Bibliography to "Slavic Dialectology: A Survey of Research since 1989"
Greenberg, Marc L.; Borowski, Krzysztof E.; Schallert, Joseph. - : Journal of Slavic Linguistics, 2017
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16
Pavlov Vend nyelvtan in prekmurščina kot slovanski jezik
Greenberg, Marc L.. - : Maribor: Zora, 2017
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17
Review: The Palgrave Handbook of Slavic Languages, Identities and Borders by Tomasz Kamusella, Motoki Nomachi, and Catherine Gibson
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18
Introduction
Greenberg, Marc L.. - : Brill, 2016
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19
The Slavic area : trajectories, borders, centres and peripheries in the Second World
In: Globalising sociolinguistics (London, 2015), p. 164-177
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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20
Rethinking Reflexivity: SJA/SE-verbs in Russian and Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian
Moulton, Erin Elizabeth. - : University of Kansas, 2015
Abstract: This dissertation is a comparative study of the class of verbs commonly termed “reflexive” in Russian and Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian (BCS). These verbs occur with the affix -sja in Russian and with the clitic se in BCS. Despite the fact that they are commonly called reflexive, they do not necessarily refer to reflexive events in which the same entity is both agent and patient. The analysis has an emphasis on semantics and uses Cognitive Grammar as a framework to determine the semantic prototypes for this group of verbs in each language. It uses as a starting point Suzanne Kemmer’s (1993) monograph on middle voice, which shows that Russian is a middle-marking language in which the light form -sja denotes middle voice and the heavy form sebja denotes true reflexivity. The study hypothesizes that Kemmer’s analysis is accurate for Russian, but not for some other Slavic languages, namely BCS. Quantitative and qualitative analysis shows that in Russian the semantic prototype for verbs with -sja is MIDDLE, while in BCS the prototype for verbs with se is REFLEXIVE. The study defines semantic types for this group of verbs including REFLEXIVE, POSSESSIVE REFLEXIVE, RECIPROCAL, IMPERSONAL, PASSIVE, MIDDLE and BENEFACTIVE and sets up diagnostic tests for determining REFLEXIVE, POSSESSIVE REFLEXIVE, and RECIPROCAL events. Quantitative analysis is based on data collected from the Parasol parallel corpus from three parallel texts and shows that both languages have MIDDLE as the most frequent semantic type for SE-verbs for both languages, but also that that Russian sometimes uses a heavy form for REFLEXIVE, POSSESSIVE REFLEXIVE, or RECIPROCAL semantic types where BCS has a light form SE-verb. Qualitative data shows that BCS SE-verbs occur in various situations unique to BCS and not in Russian, including across-the-board dependencies, past passive participles formed from SE-verbs, and se modified by adjectives as a noun or pronoun would be modified. The combined quantitative and qualitative analysis shows that BCS SE-verbs maintain the syntactic structure of REFLEXIVE verbs, pointing to the conclusion that the prototype for BCS SE-verbs is REFLEXIVE, while the prototype for these verbs in Russian is MIDDLE.
Keyword: Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian; cognitive grammar; Language; Linguistics; reflexive; Russian; sja; Slavic studies; verb
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1808/19066
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:14061
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