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 | |
| Язык | Английский | 
| Права доступа | Доступ по паролю из сети Интернет (чтение, печать, копирование) | 
| Ключ записи | on1157660327 | 
| Дата создания записи | 17.05.2020 | 
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"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"--.
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- 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
 
 - 1. Preliminaries
 - 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
 
 - 1. Introduction
 - 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
 
 - 1. Introduction
 - 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
 
 
 - 1. General characteristics: Affiliation, areal relationships, attestation, and sources of Albanian
 - 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
 
 - 1. Introduction
 - 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
 
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