Детальная информация

Название Amsterdam studies in the theory and history of linguistic science. Series IV,. Current issues in linguistic theory ;. — Perfects in Indo-European languages and beyond. — v. 352.
Другие авторы Crellin Robert Samuel David ; Jügel Thomas
Коллекция Электронные книги зарубежных издательств ; Общая коллекция
Тематика Indo-European languages — Tense. ; Grammar, Comparative and general — Tense. ; EBSCO eBooks
Тип документа Другой
Тип файла PDF
Язык Английский
Права доступа Доступ по паролю из сети Интернет (чтение, печать, копирование)
Ключ записи on1157660327
Дата создания записи 17.05.2020

Разрешенные действия

Действие 'Прочитать' будет доступно, если вы выполните вход в систему или будете работать с сайтом на компьютере в другой сети

Действие 'Загрузить' будет доступно, если вы выполните вход в систему или будете работать с сайтом на компьютере в другой сети

Группа Анонимные пользователи
Сеть Интернет

"This volume provides a detailed investigation of perfects from all the branches of the Indo-European language family, in some cases representing the first ever comprehensive description. Thorough philological examinations result in empirically well-founded analyses illustrated by over 940 examples. The unique temporal depth and diatopic breadth of attested Indo-European languages permits the investigation both of TAME (Tense-Aspect-Mood-Evidentiality) systems over time and of recurring cycles of change as well as synchronic patterns of areal distribution and contact phenomena, possibilities fully exploited in the volume. Furthermore, the cross-linguistic perspective adopted by many authors, as well as the inclusion of contributions which go beyond the boundaries of the Indo-European family per se, facilitates typological comparison. As such, the volume is intended to serve as a springboard for future research both into the semantics of the perfect in Indo-European itself, and verb systems across the world's languages"--.

Место доступа Группа пользователей Действие
Локальная сеть ИБК СПбПУ Все
Прочитать Печать Загрузить
Интернет Авторизованные пользователи СПбПУ
Прочитать Печать Загрузить
Интернет Анонимные пользователи
  • PERFECTS IN INDO-EUROPEAN LANGUAGESAND BEYOND
  • Editorial page
  • Title page
  • Copyright page
  • Table of contents
  • Editors’ foreword
    • Acknowledgements
  • Abbreviations
  • Chapter 1. Introduction
    • 1. General remarks
    • 2. Meaning
    • 3. Diathesis and alignment
    • 4. Further observations
    • 5. Conclusion
    • References
  • Chapter 2. The development of the perfect within IE verbal systems: An overview
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. The inherited IE perfect
      • 2.1 The (Proto-)Indo-European background
      • 2.2 The development of the old perfect in IE
    • 3. New perfects
      • 3.1 Periphrasis with copula only
      • 3.2 Periphrasis with ‘be’ + ‘have’
      • 3.3 Other developments
    • 4. New functions of the (old or new) perfect
      • 4.1 Perfective and/or past
      • 4.2 Inferential (evidential)
    • Acknowledgements
    • Abbreviations
    • References
  • Chapter 3. Celtic past tenses past and present
    • 1. Preliminaries
      • 1.1 Overview
      • 1.2 Typological features of Celtic verbs
    • 2. ‘After’-perfect (p1)
      • 2.1 General structure
      • 2.2 Earlier stages
      • 2.3 Function
      • 2.4 Current usage
      • 2.5 Incompatibility
      • 2.6 Hiberno-English
      • 2.7 Scottish Gaelic
      • 2.8 Manx
      • 2.9 Welsh
    • 3. p2: have-perfect
      • 3.1 General structure
      • 3.2 Possessive character
      • 3.3 Related structures
      • 3.4 Definiteness, relevance and proximity
      • 3.5 Options and constraints
      • 3.6 Paradigmatic environment
      • 3.7 Evolution/Contacts
      • 3.8 Combination of p1 & p2
      • 3.9 have-perfect in Eastern Gaelic
      • 3.10 have-perfect in Breton
    • 4. Voice
      • 4.1 From ‘passive’ to ‘autonomous’
      • 4.2 p2 as passive
      • 4.3 Passive in p1
    • 5. Derived tenses: Anteriority and Posteriority
    • 6. Non-finite perfect equivalents
      • 6.1 do/i ‘to’ as agent marker
      • 6.2 Small clauses with agus
      • 6.3 Obsolete iar > ar
    • 7. Phrasal verbs
    • Acknowledgements
    • References
  • Chapter 4. The development of the perfect in selected Middle and New Germanic languages
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Perfect forms in modern Germanic languages
    • 3. The emergence and developments of the Germanic perfects
      • 3.1 The origin in Old Germanic
      • 3.2 The emergence of the German perfect
      • 3.3 The expansion of the German perfect
      • 3.4 Degrees of perfect expansion in modern Germanic languages
    • 4. Consequences and current trends
      • 4.1 Präteritumschwund in German dialects
      • 4.2 Double perfect constructions in German substandard varieties
      • 4.3 Re-introduction of a temporal opposition in English
    • 5. Conclusion
    • References
  • Chapter 5. Perfects in Baltic and Slavic
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Perfects in Baltic
      • 2.1 Formal issues
      • 2.2 Functions of perfect constructions
      • 2.3 Issues of grammaticalisation
      • 2.4 Issues of diachrony
    • 3. Slavic
      • 3.1 Basic morphosyntactic classification
      • 3.2 The provenance of the participles
      • 3.3 Functional distinctions, range of lexical input and areal spread
      • 3.4 Intersections with related domains
      • 3.5 Diachronic development
      • 3.6 Pluperfect, future perfect and related constructions
      • 3.7 Summary on Slavic
    • 4. Bringing the threads together
      • 4.1 Main lines of diachronic development and patterns of areal spread
      • 4.2 On grammaticalisation parameters
    • 5. Paradigmatic variability
    • Acknowledgements
    • References
    • Sources
  • Chapter 6. Paradigmatisation of the perfect and resultative in Tocharian
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Perfect as a cross-linguistic category
    • 3. The old perfect
    • 4. The new perfect. Morphosyntactic properties
      • 4.1 The auxiliaries
      • 4.2 pret.p orientation
    • 5. Functions of the pret.p construction
      • 5.1 Resultative meaning
      • 5.2 Perfect meaning
      • 5.3 Pluperfect
      • 5.4 Preterite functioning as a perfect
    • 6. Conclusions
    • Acknowledgements
    • Funding
    • References
  • Chapter 7. The synthetic perfect from Indo-Iranian to Late Vedic
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Theoretical and philological preliminaries
      • 2.1 Theoretical considerations
      • 2.2 Philological preliminaries
    • 3. The synthetic perfect in Indo-Iranian
      • 3.1 The Proto-Indo-Iranian situation
      • 3.2 Outline of the development of the synthetic Perfect in Old Iranian
    • 4. The synthetic Perfect in Old Indo-Aryan
      • 4.1 The synthetic Perfect in Early Vedic
      • 4.2 The synthetic Perfect in Middle Vedic
      • 4.3 The synthetic Perfect in Late Vedic
    • 5. Conclusion
    • Acknowledgements
    • References
  • Chapter 8. The perfect in Middle and New Iranian languages
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Historical and typological overview
    • 3. Perfect formations in Iranian languages
      • 3.1 Type 1 – the prf.p construction
      • 3.2 Types 2 and 3 – two isolated cases
      • 3.3 Type 6 – the ak perfect
      • 3.4 Type 4 – the ‘stay perfect’
      • 3.5 Types 5 and 5′ – the ‘have perfect’
      • 3.6 Type 7 – the ‘exist perfect’
      • 3.7 Types 8, 9 and further subtypes
    • 4. Semantics of Iranian perfects
      • 4.1 Double perfects or supercomposed perfects
      • 4.2 Perfect and evidentiality
      • 4.3 Perfect continuous forms
    • 5. Summary
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter 9. The perfect in North-Eastern Neo-Aramaic
    • 1. Expression of the perfective
    • 2. Classification of perfect forms
      • 2.1 Type 1: Copula placed before the perfective form
      • 2.2 Type 2: Past stem inflected with D-suffixes
      • 2.3 Type 3: Resultative participle and copula
      • 2.4 Perfects with addition of invariable copula
      • 2.5 Asymmetries
    • 3. Historical development and language contact
    • 4. Function of the perfect
      • 4.1 Resultative state
      • 4.2 Anterior
      • 4.3 Existential
      • 4.4 Evidential
      • 4.5 Presuppositional
      • 4.6 Remote past
    • 5. Function of the perfect in contact languages
    • 6. Analysis of temporal structure
      • 6.1 Resultative state
      • 6.2 Anterior
      • 6.3 Existential
      • 6.4 Evidential
      • 6.5 Presuppositional
      • 6.6 Remote past
    • 7. Conclusions
    • Acknowledgements
    • References
  • Chapter 10. The perfect in Classical Armenian
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Syntax
    • 3. Morphology
    • 4. Semantics
      • 4.1 Participle
      • 4.2 Perfect
      • 4.3 One-place predicates
      • 4.4 Two-place predicates
    • 5. Later developments
    • 6. Summary
    • References
  • Chapter 11. The Hittite periphrastic perfect
    • 1. Introduction
      • 1.1 Aims and structure of the chapter
      • 1.2 The Anatolian verbal system in an Indo-European perspective
    • 2. Periphrastic perfect constructions in a cross-linguistic perspective
      • 2.1 Typology of periphrastic constructions
      • 2.2 Aspect and actionality
    • 3. Current research and open issues
      • 3.1 ḫark- and eš- constructions
      • 3.2 Semantics of the Hittite participle
      • 3.3 The periphrastic passive construction
      • 3.4 Formal aspects of ḫark- and eš- constructions
      • 3.5 Relationship between ḫark- and eš- constructions
    • 4. AVC or stative construction?
      • 4.1 Imperative
      • 4.2 Indicative
      • 4.3 Discussion
    • 5. Conclusion
    • Acknowledgements
    • References
  • Chapter 12. The Gothic perfective constructions in contrast to West Germanic
    • 1. Introductory remark on the term ‘perfect’
    • 2. The Gothic ga-compounds as viewpoint-aspect markers
    • 3. ‘Aspectual-like’ prefixations vs. periphrastic constructions in Western Germanic
    • 4. Periphrastic constructions with perfective function in Gothic and their counterparts in Old Western Germanic languages
    • 5. A remark on Modern German passive constructions
    • 6. Conclusion
    • References
    • Sources
  • Chapter 13. The perfect system in Ancient Greek
    • 1. Introduction
      • 1.1 Morphology
      • 1.2 Periodisation
      • 1.3 The problem of the semantics of the Greek perfect
    • 2. Theoretical preliminaries
      • 2.1 Homogeneity, state and change-of-state
      • 2.2 Target (T) and Result (R) states
      • 2.3 Internal and external arguments
    • 3. Mycenaean
    • 4. Archaic Greek
      • 4.1 State and other homogeneous predicates
      • 4.2 Change-of-state predicates (non-causative)
      • 4.3 Causative COS predicates
      • 4.4 Two-place verbs introducing non-homogeneous non-COS predicates
      • 4.5 Semantics of the perfect in Archaic Greek
    • 5. Classical
      • 5.1 Continuity with Archaic Greek
      • 5.2 Paradigmatisation: Expansion of the active ~ non-active opposition in the perfect
      • 5.3 Specialised transitivising and detransitivising perfect active stems
      • 5.4 Lability in the perfect system
      • 5.5 Felicity conditions
      • 5.6 Summary of the semantics of the perfect in Classical Greek
    • 6. Post-Classical Greek
      • 6.1 Overview
      • 6.2 Literary language: Distributional trends with respect to earlier periods
      • 6.3 Semantic continuity with earlier periods
      • 6.4 Documentary texts
      • 6.5 Semantics of the perfect in post-Classical Greek
    • 7. Conclusion
    • Acknowledgements
    • Funding
    • Abbreviations
    • References
  • Chapter 14. The perfect in Medieval and Modern Greek
    • 1. The inheritance from antiquity
    • 2. Perfect and pluperfect in Medieval Greek
      • 2.1 Perfects
      • 2.2 Pluperfects
    • 3. Perfect and pluperfect in Modern Greek
    • 4. Conclusion
    • 5. Summary
    • Acknowledgements
    • Editions of Ancient Greek texts
    • Editions of medieval literary texts
    • Collections of medieval non-literary texts
    • Secondary bibliography
  • Chapter 15. The perfect system of Old Albanian (Geg variety)
    • 1. General characteristics: Affiliation, areal relationships, attestation, and sources of Albanian
      • 1.1 The most important Old Geg literary sources
      • 1.2 The transcription system used
    • 2. Terminology
    • 3. An overview of the Tense-Aspect-Mood system of Old Geg
      • 3.1 The Tense-Aspect-Mood system of the Old Geg synthetic verbal stems
      • 3.2 The perfect system
      • 3.3 The future/conditional system
    • 4. The voice system
    • 5. Origin and functions of the Old Geg aorist; syncretism in the early history of Albanian
      • 5.1 Origin of the aorist
      • 5.2 Functions of the aorist in Old Geg
    • 6. The perfect system of Old Geg
      • 6.1 Morphology of the perfect system
      • 6.2 The functions of the present perfect indicative of Old Geg
      • 6.3 The function of the imperfect past perfect indicative
      • 6.4 The function of the aorist past perfect indicative
      • 6.5 The function of the present perfect indicative II
      • 6.6 The function of the imperfect past perfect indicative II
      • 6.7 The function of the present perfect subjunctive; general remarks on the non-indicative subcategories of the perfect system
      • 6.8 The function of the imperfect past perfect subjunctive
      • 6.9 The function of the present perfect optative
    • 7. The inverted univerbated perfect and the rise of the admirative
      • 7.1 Morphology of the inverted univerbated perfect (iup)
      • 7.2 Functions of iup tenses and moods in Buzuku
      • 7.3 More on the rise of the admirative in Old Geg: The evidence of Budi
    • 8. Summary
    • Acknowledgements
    • Funding
    • References
      • Sources of Old Albanian
      • Secondary literature
  • Chapter 16. The perfect system in Latin
    • 1. Introduction
      • 1.1 Formal overview
      • 1.2 The problem of the semantics of the Latin perfect
      • 1.3 Periodization of Latin
    • 2. Frameworks, terminology and definitions
      • 2.1 Viewpoint aspect
      • 2.2 Tense
      • 2.3 Situation types
      • 2.4 Conceptual moments
      • 2.5 Change of state
      • 2.6 Resultative
      • 2.7 The semantics ~ pragmatics interface
    • 3. The semantics of the EL and CL perfect stems
      • 3.1 Synthetic present perfect
      • 3.2 Synthetic past and future perfects
      • 3.3 Synthetic perfect infinitive
      • 3.4 Defective synthetic forms
      • 3.5 Participle in -tu- < *-to-
      • 3.6 Analytic perfect
    • 4. Conclusion: Unity in the semantics of the perfect system?
    • Acknowledgements
    • Funding
    • Formal semantics symbols and abbreviations
    • References
  • Chapter 17. Calquing a quirk: The perfect in the languages of Europe
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. The distribution of the perfect
    • 3. Old High German and Old Saxon and the Charlemagne Sprachbund
    • 4. Portuguese on the periphery
      • 4.1 The influence of Arabic
      • 4.2 Historical background of Al-Andalus
      • 4.3 The perfects of Arabic
      • 4.4 Possible influence on Romance perfects
    • 5. Czech, Slovak, and the influence of German
      • 5.1 Historical background of German influence
      • 5.2 German influence on aspectual distribution of Czech
      • 5.3 Prescriptive reactions to German influence
    • 6. Conclusions
    • References
  • Chapter 18. The perfect in context in texts in English, Sistani Balochi and New Testament Greek
    • 1. The perfect in context: English
    • 2. The perfect in context: Sistani Balochi
    • 3. The perfect in context: New Testament Greek
    • 4. Conclusions
    • Acknowledgements
    • References
  • Chapter 19. Indo-European perfects in typological perspective
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Data sources for multilingual linguistic research
    • 3. Methods in multilingual corpus studies
    • 4. The corpora
    • 5. Perfects and iamitives
    • 6. Parameters of variation in IE perfects and elsewhere
    • 7. Incipient grammaticalization of ‘already’ in Indo-European languages
    • 8. Conclusion
    • References
    • Appendix. Languages represented in the NT gram set (ISO 639–3 codes in square brackets)
  • Language index
  • Subject index

Количество обращений: 0 
За последние 30 дней: 0

Подробная статистика