Cognitive paths into the Slavic domain.9783110196207 Cognitive paths into the Slavic domain. Ed. by Dagmar Divjak and Agata Kochanska. Mouton mouton lamb pelt made to resemble seal or beaver. de Gruyter 2007 463 pages $145.00 Hardcover Cognitive linguistics research; 38 PG59 Combining interests and ideas in Slavic and cognitive linguistics, these 14 essays present overviews of recent research on the nominal system, the verbal system, the sentential system, changing language and motivating language. Topics include nominative nominative (nŏm`ĭnətĭv), [Lat.,=naming], in Latin grammar, the case usually employed for the noun that is the subject of the sentence. and instrumental variation of adjectival ad·jec·ti·val adj. Of, relating to, or functioning as an adjective. ad jec·ti predicates with the Russian copula copula /cop·u·la/ (kop´u-lah)1. any connecting part or structure. 2. a median ventral elevation on the embryonic tongue formed by union of the second pharyngeal arches and playing a role in tongue development. byt', double marking in the Macedonian dativus sympatheticus, the special nature of Russian bi-aspectual verbs, perfectives and imperfectives in the Croatian present tense, conflicting epistemic ep·i·ste·mic adj. Of, relating to, or involving knowledge; cognitive. [From Greek epist m meanings of the Polish
aspectual variants in past and future uses, Polish and Serbian
predictive conditions and their association with conjunctions and verb
forms along with epistemic stance, degrees of event integration in
Russian, impersonal construction in Polish, Old Czech and a frame
semantic account of morphosemantic change, a Russian delimitative, the
rise of an epistemic pragmatic marker in Balkan Slavic, iconicity and
linear ordering of constituents of Polish and discourse-aspectual
markers in Czech sound symbolic expressions.
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