Unique Features of the Nominal Morphological Systems in the Eastern Dialects of Khanty

書誌詳細
Parent link:NORDSCI International Conference Proceedings: Education and Language Edition: conference proceedings, Novotel, Athens, Greece, August 19, 2019.— , 2019
Book 1. Vol. 2 : Education and Educational Research. Language and Linguistics.— 2019.— [P. 195-203]
第一著者: Vorobyeva V. V. Viktoriya Vladimirovna
団体著者: Национальный исследовательский Томский политехнический университет Школа базовой инженерной подготовки Отделение иностранных языков
その他の著者: Novitskay I. V. Irina Vladimirovna
要約:Title screen
This paper presents results of a study aiming at identifying unique features in thesystem of morphological markers of the noun in four idioms of Eastern Khanty(Vakh, Vasyugan, Surgut and Salym). The analysis focuses on the paradigms of threenominal categories: number, possession, and case. It draws on the linguistic dataobtained from various grammars of Khanty written over the period from thenineteenth century to the present time. The analysis also incorporates the field dataobtained during research trips to the speakers of the Vakh-Vasyugan idiom. Thefindings point to the fact that the differences are either morphological orphonological, and are sometimes of debatable nature.
言語:英語
出版事項: 2019
主題:
オンライン・アクセス:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED603440
https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED603411.pdf#page=195
フォーマット: 電子媒体 図書の章
KOHA link:https://koha.lib.tpu.ru/cgi-bin/koha/opac-detail.pl?biblionumber=664819
その他の書誌記述
要約:Title screen
This paper presents results of a study aiming at identifying unique features in thesystem of morphological markers of the noun in four idioms of Eastern Khanty(Vakh, Vasyugan, Surgut and Salym). The analysis focuses on the paradigms of threenominal categories: number, possession, and case. It draws on the linguistic dataobtained from various grammars of Khanty written over the period from thenineteenth century to the present time. The analysis also incorporates the field dataobtained during research trips to the speakers of the Vakh-Vasyugan idiom. Thefindings point to the fact that the differences are either morphological orphonological, and are sometimes of debatable nature.