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Title: The evolution of the Slavic dual: a biolinguistic perspective
Creators: Slobodchikoff Tatyana G.
Collection: Электронные книги зарубежных издательств; Общая коллекция
Subjects: Slavic languages — Number.; Foreign Language Study: Slavic Languages (Other).; EBSCO eBooks
Document type: Other
File type: PDF
Language: English
Rights: Доступ по паролю из сети Интернет (чтение, печать, копирование)
Record key: on1121144839

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Developing a new theory of morphosyntactic feature economy in a morphology framework, this book uses a biolinguistic approach to examine the evolution of Slavic languages to discover how some developed a separate dual number category while others have only singular and plural and to explain the evolution of the number category in Slavic languages.

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Table of Contents

  • Cover
  • The Evolution of the Slavic Dual
  • Series Page
  • The Evolution of the Slavic Dual: A Biolinguistic Perspective
  • Copyright Page
  • Dedication
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • Chapter 1
    • Introduction
      • 1.1 THE LINGUISTIC PUZZLE OF DUALNUMBER IN SLAVIC LANGUAGES
      • 1.2 The Evolution of the Slavic Dual: From Proto-Slavic to the Present
      • 1.3 Morphosyntactic Feature Economy: A New Theory of Diachronic Change
      • 1.4 Goals of the Book
      • 1.5 Main Claim and Contribution
      • 1.6 Methodology and Data
      • 1.7 Structure of the Book
      • Notes
  • Chapter 2
    • The Problem of the Slavic Dual from a Diachronic Perspective
      • 2.1 THE PROBLEM OF THE SLAVIC DUAL ANDPATTERNS OF DIACHRONIC CHANGE
      • 2.2 Hypotheses of the Evolution of the Slavic Dual
      • 2.3 Principle of Morphosyntactic Feature Economy and Language Change
      • 2.4 Theoretical Assumptions
      • Notes
  • Chapter 3
    • The Slavic Dual from a Typological Perspective
      • 3.1 Humboldt’s Typology of Dual Number
      • 3.2 Jespersen’s Typology of the Dual
      • 3.3 Plank’s Typology of the Dual: Humboldt Revisited
      • 3.4 Corbett’s Constraint on Ranges of the Dual and Plural
      • 3.5 Cysouw: Dual as a Restricted Group
      • 3.6 The Typology of the Slavic Dual
      • 3.7 Conclusion
      • Notes
  • Chapter 4
    • Derivation of the Slavic Dual in Distributed Morphology
      • 4.1 The Architecture of Grammar in Distributed Morphology
      • 4.2 Derivations of the Slavic Dual in DM
      • 4.3 Impoverishment, Fission, and Morphosyntactic Simplification of the Slavic Dual
      • 4.4 Conclusion
      • Notes
  • Chapter 5
    • The Slavic Dual and Number Theory
      • 5.1 The Two Number Features of the Slavic Dual
      • 5.2 The Two Patterns of Variation: The Bimorphemic and Monomorphemic Duals
      • 5.3 The Bimorphemic Dual in Contemporary Standard Slovenian
      • 5.4 The Bimorphemic Dual in Contemporary Upper Sorbian
      • 5.5 The Bimorphemic Dual in Contemporary Lower Sorbian
      • 5.6 The Monomorphemic Dual and Its Loss in Kashubian
      • 5.7 The Monomorphemic Dual and Its Loss in Old East Slavic
      • 5.8. Conclusion
      • Notes
  • Chapter 6
    • Morphosyntactic Feature Economy and Reanalysis
      • 6.1 Morphosyntactic Markedness of Feature Values of the Dual
      • 6.2 The Principle of Morphosyntactic Feature Economy
      • 6.3 The Principle of Morphosyntactic Feature Economy and Diachronic Change
      • 6.4 The Reanalysis of the Old Slovenian Dual in Contemporary Standard Slovenian
      • 6.5 The Reanalysis of the Old Sorbian Dual in Contemporary Upper and Lower Sorbian
      • 6.6 The Reanalysis of the Nineteenth-Century Kashubian Dual as Plural in Contemporary Kashubian
      • 6.7 The Reanalysis of the Old East Slavic Dual as Plural
      • 6.8 Conclusion
      • Notes
  • Chapter 7
    • Conclusion
      • 7.1 THE ROLE OF MORPHOSYNTACTIC FEATUREECONOMY IN THE EVOLUTION OF THE SLAVIC DUAL
      • 7.2 Implications
  • Appendix A
    • Abbreviations
  • Appendix B
    • Orthographical Systems and Transliteration Symbols
  • References
  • Index
  • About the Author

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