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Thompson, Irene – Russian Language Journal, 1980
This research investigated the possibility that there exists in Russian, as in other languages, a certain order of acquisition of grammatical morphemes that is relatively stable across individuals and which is immune to methods of instruction, textbooks, teachers, and other circumstances surrounding the learning of Russian. (Author)
Descriptors: Case (Grammar), Learning Theories, Morphemes, Russian
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Levine, James S. – Russian Language Journal, 1986
Linguistic expressions involving body parts (and other entities) belonging to an "interested person" often have unique grammatical properties, e.g., the dative case in Russian. The notion called Inalienable Possession (IP) is used to account for such properties. Semantic and pragmatic analyses account for some of the properties of IP in Russian.…
Descriptors: Case (Grammar), Nouns, Phrase Structure, Pragmatics
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Bethin, Christina Y. – Russian Language Journal, 1983
Spatial relationships represented by po + dative case in Russian may be analyzed as underlying locations. The directionality sometimes present in po + dative sentences is due to the cooccurrence of the directional (determined) verb of motion and not to an underlying relation goal. (SL)
Descriptors: Case (Grammar), Context Clues, Language Research, Newspapers
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Kempe, Vera; MacWhinney, Brian – Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 1998
Investigated the acquisition of the comprehension of overt morphological case marking by adult native speakers of English who were learning Russian or German as a second language. Results demonstrated that learners of Russian use case marking much earlier than learners of German and that learners of German rely more on animacy to supplement the…
Descriptors: Adults, Case (Grammar), German, Morphology (Languages)
Rubinstein, George – IRAL, 1995
Examined the oral performance of midcourse and endcourse adult American learners of Russian to determine the accuracy order of Russian cases and demonstrated an order of accuracy common to both groups. According to decreasing accuracy, the Russian cases cluster in three rank orders: (1) prepositional and accusative; (2) genitive and instrumental;…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Adults, Case (Grammar), Language Proficiency
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Rubenstein, George – Slavic and East European Journal, 1995
Studies the kinds of errors made by American learners of Russian, the reasons for these errors, change in error patterns, and resemblance between the errors of foreign and primary language learners. (42 references) (CK)
Descriptors: Adults, Case (Grammar), Connected Discourse, Error Analysis (Language)
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Launer, Michael K. – Russian Language Journal, 1986
Investigates the influence of the prefix "o-/ob-" on the choice of case for nominal objects of prefixed verbs, using a semantic field analysis. Focuses on four semantic functions: (1) objective; (2) locative; (3) factitive; and (4) comparative. The results are useful both to theoretical linguists and to teachers of Russian. (LMO)
Descriptors: Case (Grammar), Componential Analysis, Language Patterns, Language Usage