Morphologies in Contact / / ed. by Martine Vanhove, Thomas Stolz, Hitomi Otsuka, Aina Urdze.

Dieser Sammelband greift den Begriff der Kontaktmorphologie (Contact Morphology) auf, der 1996 von David Wilkins geprägt wurde. Bisher gehen die meisten Sprachkontaktstudien davon aus, dass morphologische Strukturen selten entlehnt werden, da eine Kopie morphologischer Strukturen einen intensiven un...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter DGBA Backlist Complete English Language 2000-2014 PART1
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Place / Publishing House:Berlin : : Akademie Verlag, , [2012]
©2012
Year of Publication:2012
Language:English
Series:Studia Typologica [STTYP] : Beihefte / Supplements STUF - Sprachtypologie und Universalienforschung / Language Typology and Universals , 10
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Physical Description:1 online resource (340 p.)
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Table of Contents:
  • Front Matter
  • Preface
  • Part I: Amerindia
  • Part I: Amerindia
  • Morphologies in contact: form, meaning, and use in the grammar of reference
  • Part I: Amerindia
  • Borrowing of a Cariban number marker into three Tupi-Guarani languages
  • Part I: Amerindia
  • Spanish diminutive markers -ito/-ita in Mesoamerican languages: a challenge for acceptance of gender distinction
  • Part II: Austronesia
  • Part II: Austronesia
  • Survival in a niche. On gender-copy in Chamorro (and sundry languages)
  • Part III: Balkan (and beyond)
  • Part III: Balkan (and beyond)
  • Verb morphologies in contact: evidence from the Balkan area*
  • Part III: Balkan (and beyond)
  • Romani in contact with Bulgarian and Greek: replication in verbal morphology
  • Part III: Balkan (and beyond)
  • Morphology in language contact: verbal loanblend formation in Asia Minor Greek (Aivaliot)*
  • Part III: Balkan (and beyond)
  • Mood meets mood: Turkic versus Indo-European
  • Part IV: Romance
  • Part IV: Romance
  • Contact-induced change in personal pronouns: some Romance examples*
  • Part IV: Romance
  • The influence of loanwords on Sardinian word formation
  • Part IV: Romance
  • Swinging back the pendulum: French morphology and de-Italianization in Piedmontese
  • Part V: Slavic (outside the Slavic core area)
  • Part V: Slavic (outside the Slavic core area)
  • Contact phenomena in the Slavic of Molise: some remarks about nouns and prepositional phrases*
  • Part V: Slavic (outside the Slavic core area)
  • Language contact, language decay and morphological change: evidence from the speech of Czech immigrants in Paraguay*
  • Part VI: Africa
  • Part VI: Africa
  • Roots and patterns in Beja (Cushitic): the issue of language contact with Arabic
  • Part VI: Africa
  • Back Matter