iReteslaw

Are there Analytical Adjectives in Russian? Evidence from a Corpus Study and Experimental Data

Pokaż uproszczony rekord

dc.contributor.author Sokolova, Svetlana
dc.contributor.author Edberg, Bjørg Helene
dc.date.accessioned 2020-01-12T21:02:21Z
dc.date.available 2020-01-12T21:02:21Z
dc.date.issued 2019
dc.identifier.citation Poljarnyj Vestnik: Norwegian Journal of Slavic Studies, vol. 22, 2019, pp. 57–82 en
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12528/1246
dc.description.abstract In the scholarly literature there has been a discussion on whether modern Russian is developing more analytical tendencies, with special attention to new nominal compounds such as VIP-zal 'VIP lounge', veb- stranica ‘web page’. Traditionally, such units are described in terms of “analytical adjectives”, which covers all nominal non-inflectional units related to a head noun (Panov 1960, 1971). The data analyzed in this article suggest that what has previously been described as “analytical adjectives” constitutes at least three different patterns: 1) nominal [N[N]] compounds that roughly represent two groups: type (a) where the first component (modifier) should be a loan word (units like internet, veb, top, etc., the head noun of such compounds can be of Russian origin); type (b) where the second component (head noun) tends to be a loan word, whereas the modifier can be of Russian origin (this type is characteristic of names and titles like Gorbačev-fond ‘The Gorbachev foundation’) 2) appositions that mostly include abbreviations and names of styles and can be used both pre-positionally and post-positionally to the head noun (units like VIP); 3) a contracted pattern (potential stump compounds, or blends, like internacional-sem’ja from the inflectional adjective internacional’nyj ‘international’ and the noun semja ‘family’). The third pattern was productive in Soviet discourse (cf. zapčasti from zap[asnyje] ‘replacement’ časti ‘parts’) and seems to be regaining productivity. The presence of these three patterns affects not only the system of Russian word-formation but also the Russian grammatical system in general, since it evokes various intermediate cases between adjectives and compounding elements. We present a very general overview of the aforementioned patterns based on the data from a corpus study, an Internet study and a linguistic experiment. en
dc.language.iso other en
dc.publisher Poljarnyj vestnik en
dc.subject język rosyjski pl
dc.subject przymiotnik analityczny pl
dc.subject słowotwórstwo pl
dc.subject badania korpusowe pl
dc.subject Russian language en
dc.subject compound word en
dc.subject wyraz złożony pl
dc.subject analytical adjective en
dc.subject word formation en
dc.subject corpus research en
dc.title Are there Analytical Adjectives in Russian? Evidence from a Corpus Study and Experimental Data en
dc.type Article en


Pliki tej pozycji

Pozycja umieszczona jest w następujących kolekcjach

Pokaż uproszczony rekord

Szukaj w iReteslawie


Szukanie zaawansowane

Przeglądaj

Moje konto