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- The Slavic Languages
The Slavic Languages
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Frontmatter -- Table of Contents -- Preface -- Abbreviations of Journals -- Abbreviations of Languages and Dialects -- List of Symbols -- Towards a Phonemic Typology of the Slavic Languages -- The Historical Phonology of Common Slavic -- The Common Slavic Prosodie Pattern and its Evolution in Slovenian -- On Discreteness and Continuity in Structural Dialectology -- The Phonemic Patterns of the Polish Dialects: A study in structural dialectology -- The Vocalic Systems of Modern Standard Slovenian -- The Dialect of Resia and the "Common Slovenian" Accentual Pattern -- Polish Mazurzenie and the Serbo-Croatian Palatals -- The Singular-Plural Opposition in the Slavic Languages -- The Grammatical Genders of the Slavic Languages -- The Fate of the Neuter in the Slovene Dialects -- The Collective and Counted Plurals of the Slavic Nouns -- The Interdependence of Paradigmatic and Derivational Patterns -- The Accentuation and Grammatical Categories of the -a stems in South Slavic -- The South Slavic Infinitive and its Accentuation -- The Inflection of Serbo-Croatian Substantives and their Genitive Plural Endings -- Grammatical Neutralization in Slavic Expressive Forms -- The Appellative Forms (the Vocative and Imperative) of Bulgarian -- The Expressive Suffix -x- in Polish and in other Slavic Languages -- Slavic Morphophonemics in its Typological and Diachronic Aspects -- The Asyllabic Verbal Stems in Slavic and Their Accentuation -- The Slavic Vocative and its Accentuation -- The Place and Function of Stress in Russian Nominal Forms with a Zero in the Ending -- The Accent Patterns of Bulgarian Substantives -- The Accentuation of the Russian Verb -- The Accentuation of the -I- Participle in Serbo-Croatian -- The Slavic Athematic (Nominal) Stems and their Accentuation -- The Declension and Derivation of the Russian Simple Numerals -- Conservatism and Innovation in Slavic Adverbs: the Case of the Russian dòma "at home, " domój "home" -- Russ. vecór, vcerä, S-Cr. jùce(r) , Pol. wczoraj 'yesterday' -- The Etymology of Common Slavic skot/¿, 'cattle' and Related Terms -- Slavic Kinship Terms and the Perils of the Soul -- Index of Languages -- Index of Names
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