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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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Koo, John H. – Russian Language Journal, 1980
Alaska, with its history of Russian colonization, has a large stock of Russian loanwords. The majority of the loanwords discussed are for cultural and concrete items and are substances, emerging as noun words, to which paragogic endings are agglutinated. (NCR)
Descriptors: Eskimo Aleut Languages, Linguistic Borrowing, Morphemes, Morphology (Languages)
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Gibson, Margaret I. – Russian Language Journal, 1984
Examines some of the early uses of instrumental nouns unaccompanied by prepositions and considers the various meanings they conveyed, in order to show the kinds of changes they have undergone. A number of nominal forms have been adverbialized, and some have been replaced by prepositional phrases or other grammatical constructions. (SL)
Descriptors: Diachronic Linguistics, Grammar, Language Research, Morphology (Languages)
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Mayer, Harvey E. – Russian Language Journal, 1976
It is asserted that noun errors made by students of Russian show that they have not grasped the syntactic functions of the declensional desinences. A number of teaching techniques are outlined which attempt to follow the subconscious processes that speakers of Russian go through in selecting declensional desinences. (RM)
Descriptors: Case (Grammar), Grammar, Language Instruction, Nouns
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Sorokin, Boris – Russian Language Journal, 1977
As an aid to students of Russian, two general rules concerning numerals are suggested: rule of the genitive case and rule of the case of "enumerated object." These rules, together with five secondary rules and corresponding declension forms, define the numeral system. (Text is in Russian.) (SK)
Descriptors: Adjectives, Case (Grammar), Grammar, Language Instruction
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Feldstein, Ronald F. – Russian Language Journal, 1979
Reexamines data concerning the effect a mobile vowel, followed by the zero-ending, has on a stem's stress pattern in Contemporary Standard Russian. Suggests a new representation of the stress patterns of stems with the vowel-zero alternation. (PMJ)
Descriptors: Adjectives, Morphology (Languages), Morphophonemics, Nouns
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Cubberley, Paul – Russian Language Journal, 1987
Analyses for stress patterns of the first 1,000 nouns and 500 verbs from a high-frequency Russian vocabulary list. The most irregular patterns are seen in the most frequently occurring items and, therefore, should be learned early in the study of Russian. (Author/LMO)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Computational Linguistics, Morphology (Languages), Nouns
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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