The Georgian verb: a morphosyntactic analysis
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Hauptverfasser: | , , |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English Georgian |
Veröffentlicht: |
Hyattsville, MD
Dunwoody Press
2008
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Includes indexes |
Beschreibung: | vi, 698 S. 29 cm |
ISBN: | 9781931546515 |
Internformat
MARC
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005 | 20100809 | ||
007 | t | ||
008 | 090414s2008 |||| 00||| eng d | ||
020 | |a 9781931546515 |9 978-1-931546-51-5 | ||
035 | |a (OCoLC)317118863 | ||
035 | |a (DE-599)BVBBV035432512 | ||
040 | |a DE-604 |b ger |e rakwb | ||
041 | 0 | |a eng |a geo | |
049 | |a DE-12 |a DE-473 |a DE-83 |a DE-11 | ||
050 | 0 | |a PK9114 | |
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100 | 1 | |a Melikʻišvili, Damana |d 1939- |e Verfasser |0 (DE-588)139274790 |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a The Georgian verb |b a morphosyntactic analysis |c Damana Melikishvili , J. Daniel Humphries, Maia Kupunia |
264 | 1 | |a Hyattsville, MD |b Dunwoody Press |c 2008 | |
300 | |a vi, 698 S. |c 29 cm | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
500 | |a Includes indexes | ||
650 | 4 | |a Georgian language / Verb | |
650 | 4 | |a Georgian language / Morphology | |
650 | 4 | |a Georgian language / Grammatical categories | |
650 | 4 | |a Hierarchy (Linguistics) | |
650 | 4 | |a Grammatik | |
650 | 4 | |a Georgian language |x Grammar | |
650 | 4 | |a Georgian language |x Verb | |
650 | 0 | 7 | |a Georgisch |0 (DE-588)4124679-2 |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf |
650 | 0 | 7 | |a Morphosyntax |0 (DE-588)4114635-9 |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf |
650 | 0 | 7 | |a Verb |0 (DE-588)4062553-9 |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf |
689 | 0 | 0 | |a Georgisch |0 (DE-588)4124679-2 |D s |
689 | 0 | 1 | |a Verb |0 (DE-588)4062553-9 |D s |
689 | 0 | 2 | |a Morphosyntax |0 (DE-588)4114635-9 |D s |
689 | 0 | |5 DE-604 | |
700 | 1 | |a Humphries, J. Daniel |e Verfasser |4 aut | |
700 | 1 | |a Kupunia, Maia |e Verfasser |4 aut | |
856 | 4 | 2 | |m Digitalisierung UB Bamberg |q application/pdf |u http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=017352878&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |3 Inhaltsverzeichnis |
940 | 1 | |n oe | |
999 | |a oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-017352878 |
Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804138875079098368 |
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adam_text | Table
of Contents
Foreword
.......................................................................................................................................................................................................
і
Works Cited
.................................................................................................................................................................................................
v
Part One: Grammar
__________________________________________________________________________
Chapter
1
The Structure and Construction of Non-lnversive Georgian Verbs
1.1.
Combining
Stative
and Dynamic Verbs with Arguments in Georgian
.............................................................................1
1.2.
How Non-lnversive Georgian Verbs Agree with Their Arguments in Person and Number
.............................................4
1.2.1.
Basic Rules for Combining Person Markers in the Verb
............................................................................................9
1.2.2.
Basic Rules for Combining Number Markers in the Verb
..........................................................................................9
1.3.
Conjugation Patterns of Non-lnversive Verbs and Argument Case Assignment in Georgian
........................................16
Type
I.A.
Stative
and Dynamic Monovalent/Monopersonal (Absolute) Passive-Construction Forms
...........................16
Type I.B.
Stative
and Dynamic Bivalent/Bipersonal (Relative) Passive-Construction Forms
........................................17
Type
H.A.
Stative-Dynamic Monovalent/Monopersonal (Absolute) Active-Construction Forms
.................................22
Type II.B. Dynamic Bivalent/Bipersonal (Relative) Active-Construction Forms
..........................................................23
Type
Ш.А.
Dynamic Trivalent/Bipersonal (Relative) Active-Construction Forms
........................................................26
Type III.B. Dynamic
Bivalent/M onopersonal
(Relative) Active-Construction Forms
...................................................28
Type IV.A. Dynamic Trivalent/Bipersonal (Relative) Active-Construction Forms
........................................................31
Type IV.B. Dynamic Trivalent/Bipersonal (Relative) Active-Construction Forms
........................................................35
1.4.
Summary of Non-lnversive Verb Conjugation in Georgian
............................................................................................38
Chapter
2
Transitivity and Version in Georgian
2.1.
How Georgian Verbs ExpressTransitivity
.......................................................................................................................45
2.2.
How Georgian Verbs Express Version
............................................................................................................................47
Chapter
3
The Form and Function of Georgian Preverbs
3.1.
Preverbs Used to
Expressan
Action s Direction and Orientation in Space
....................................................................56
3.2.
Preverbs Used to Express Verbal Aspect
........................................................................................................................62
Chapter
4
The Historical interrelationship of Tense, Aspect, and Mood in Georgian
4.1.
The Proto-Georgian Verbal System
................................................................................................................................65
4.2.
Development of Present Tense Forms in Georgian
.........................................................................................................66
4.3.
Development of Future Tense Forms in Georgian
..........................................................................................................67
4.4.
Disambiguating the Conjunctive Mood from the Future Tense
......................................................................................68
4.5.
The Imperative Mood in Georgian
..................................................................................................................................70
4.6.
Summary of the Basic Morphosyntactic Features of Non-lnversive Georgian Verbs
.....................................................71
Chapter
5
Inversion and the Development of Series III Georgian Verbs
5.1.
A
Diachronie
and
Synchronie
Analysis of Series III Georgian Verbs
............................................................................72
5.2.
The Development of Evidential Status in Georgian
........................................................................................................74
5.3.
How
Inversive
Relative
Stative
Forms Developed into Resultative Forms
....................................................................77
5.3.1.
Inversive
Relative
Stative
Present Indicatives Become First Resultative Forms
......................................................77
5.3.2.
Inversive
Relative
Stative Aorists
Become Second Resultative Forms
....................................................................85
5.3.3.
Inversive
Relative
Stative
Conjunctives Become Third Resuitative Forms
.............................................................89
5.4.
How Series 111 Forms Continued to Expand the Dynamic Verbal Paradigm in Georgian
..............................................93
5.5.
How Series HI Verbs Agree with Their Arguments in Person and Number
.....................................................................107
5.6.
Summary of How Inversion of Relative
Stative
Verbs Generated Series III Forms
.........................................................111
Chapter
6
The Paradigmatic Arrangement of the Georgian Verb
6.1.
The Organization of Georgian Verbs into Screeves and Series
.....................................................................................115
6.2.
The Modern Georgian Verbal Paradigm
.......................................................................................................................115
6.2.1.
Series 1
.................................................................................................................................................................115
6.2.2.
Series II:
..............................................................................................................................................................116
6.2.3.
Series III:
.............................................................................................................................................................
П7
6.3.
The Syntactic Basis of Organizing Conjugated Georgian Verbs into Screeves and Series
...........................................117
6.4.
The Historical Interrelationship of the Series
................................................................................................................
1
18
6.5.
Sample Chart of Series and Screeves for Georgian Non-Inversive Verbs
....................................................................119
Chapter
7
Inversion and the Development of Affective
Statíve
Verbs in Georgian
7.1.
Affective
Stative
Verbs in Georgian
.............................................................................................................................123
7.2.
A
Diachronie
and
Synchronie
Analysis of Affective
Stative
Verbs in Georgian
..........................................................124
Chapter
8
Using Diathesis to Classify Georgian Verbs
8.1.
Classifying Georgian Verbs Morphosyntactically: Diathesis vs. Voice
........................................................................129
8.2.
Organizing Georgian Verbs into Diatheses
...................................................................................................................130
8.2.1.
The First Diathesis
..................................................................................................................................................130
8.2.2.
The Second Diathesis
..............................................................................................................................................136
8.2.3.
The Third Diathesis
................................................................................................................................................143
8.3.
Summary of the Three Diatheses in Georgian
...............................................................................................................147
8.4.
A Structural Summary of Georgian Verbs by Diathesis
................................................................................................150
8.5.
Distribution of Person and Number Markers by Diathesis
............................................................................................153
Chapter
9
The Syntactic Interrelationship of the Georgian Verb and its Arguments
9.1.
How Construction Is Expressed in the Georgian Sentence
...........................................................................................155
Typel
................................................................................................................................................................................157
Typel,
Group
1.............................................................................................................................................................157
Type I, Group
2.............................................................................................................................................................158
Typel,
Group
3.............................................................................................................................................................159
Type II
..............................................................................................................................................................................160
Type II, Group
1............................................................................................................................................................161
Type II, Group
2............................................................................................................................................................162
Type II, Group
3............................................................................................................................................................162
Type III
.............................................................................................................................................................................163
Type HI, Group
1..........................................................................................................................................................164
Type III, Group
2..........................................................................................................................................................164
Type HI, Group
3..........................................................................................................................................................165
Type IV
.............................................................................................................................................................................167
Type IV, Group
1..........................................................................................................................................................167
Type IV, Group
1,
Subgroup A
.....................................................................................................................................167
Type IV, Group
1,
Subgroup
В
.....................................................................................................................................169
Type IV, Group
2..........................................................................................................................................................171
9.2.
Chikibava s Principles of Argument-Verb Number Agreement: The Morphological Subject
......................................172
9.2.1.
The First Person Morphological Subject
.............................................................................................................172
9.2.2.The Second Person Morphological Subject
.........................................................................................................173
9.2.3.The Third Person Morphological Subject
.............................................,..............................................................173
9.3.
Chikibava s Principles of Argument-Verb Number Agreement: The Morphological Object
.......................................175
9.3.
La. The First Person Morphological Direct Object
.................................................................................................175
9.3.
l.b. The First Person Morphological Indirect Object
..............................................................................................175
9.3.2.a.
The Second Person Morphological Direct Object
............................................................................................176
9.3.2.D. The Second Person Morphological Indirect Object
..........................................................................................176
9.3.3.a. The Third Person Morphological Direct Object
...............................................................................................177
9.3.3.b. The Third Person Morphological Indirect Object
............................................................................................177
9.4.
Syntactic Constructions Arranged by Diathesis
............................................................................................................179
Part Two: Diatheses
Chapter
10:
The First Diathesis
10.1.
First Diathesis Autoactive Verbs
.................................................................................................................................185
10.1.1.
A Historical Overview of the Autoactive Conjugation System
............................................................................185
10.1.2.
Derivational Features of Autoactive Verbs
...........................................................................................................189
10.1.3.
Paradigmatic Features of Autoactive Verbs
..........................................................................................................192
Typel
Conjugation
.......................................................................................................................................................193
Type II Conjugation
.......................................................................................................................................................195
Type III Conjugation
.....................................................................................................................................................196
10.1.4.
Conjugation Classes of Autoactive Verbs: Archaic
Non-Productive
Forms
........................................................197
Class I Autoactive Verbs with a Present Theme in RT-0
..................................................................
(Paradigm
1.1) 197
Class II Autoactive Verbs with a Present Theme in (w-)Rg/oT-0
.....................................................
(Paradigm
1.2) 198
Class III Autoactive Verbs with a Present Theme in RT-o
.......................................................................................203
Class III, Subclass
1.........................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.3) 203
Class III, Subclass
2........................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.4) 207
Class III, Subclass
3........................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.5) 214
Class III, Subclass
4........................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.6) 217
10.1.5.
Conjugation Classes of Autoactive Verbs: Productive Forms
........................................,.....................................219
Class IV Autoactive Verbs with a Present Theme in RT-03
.........................................................................................219
Class IV, Subclass la
......................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.7) 221
Class IV, Subclass
1
b
.....................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.8) 221
Class IV, Subclass
2 .......................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.9) 223
Class IV, Subclass
3 .....................................................................................................................
(Paradigm I.
10) 225
Class V Autoactive Verbs with a Present Theme in
(w-)RT-qõ
....................................................................................227
Class V, Subclass la
.....................................................................................................................
(Paradigml.il)
227
Class V, Subclass lb
.....................................................................................................................
(Paradigm 1.
12) 227
Class V, Subclass
2.......................................................................................................................
(Paradigm 1.
13) 240
Class V, Subclass 3a
.....................................................................................................................
(Paradigm 1.
14) 247
Class V, Subclass 3b
.....................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.15) 255
Class V, Subclass 4a
......................................................................................................................
(Paradigm 1.
16) 259
Class V, Subclass 4b
.....................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.17) 260
Class VI Autoactive Verbs with a Present Theme in
RT
-сіб
........................................................................................
262
Class VI, Subclass la
....................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.18) 262
Class VI, Subclass lb
...................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.19) 268
Class VI, Subclass 2a
....................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.20) 279
Class VI, Subclass 2b
...................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.21) 281
Class VI, Subclass
3 .....................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.22) 284
Class VI, Subclass
4 .....................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.23) 287
Class
VII
.......................................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.24) 289
10.2.
First Diathesis Active Verbs
........................................................................................................................................292
10.2.1.
A Historical Overview of the Active Conjugation System
...................................................................................292
10.2.2.
Active Verbs Arranged in Conjugation Classes by Thematic Alternations
..................................,.......................298
Class I Active Verbs with a Present Theme in RT-0
..........................................................
(Paradigms
1.25 & 1.26) 298
Class
Π
Active Verbs with an Ablauting Present Theme in Rg/oT-0
................................,.........................,...............304
Class II, Subclass
1 .......................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.27) 305
Class II, Subclasses
2
and
3...................................................................,..........................
(Paradigms
1.28 & 1.29) 306
Class HI Active Verbs with a Present Theme in RT-o
..................................................................................................308
Class III, Subclass I
......................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.30) 308
Class III, Subclass
2......................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.31) 310
Class III, Subclass
3......................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.32) 311
Class IV Active Verbs with a Present Theme in
RT-¿3
................................................................................................314
Class IV, Subclass
1 .....................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.33) 316
Class IV, Subclass
2 ...................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.34) 318
Class V Active Verbs with a Present Theme in 0-RT-3&
..............................................................................................323
Class V, Subclass la
................................................................................................................
....(Paradigm
1.35) 324
Class V, Subclass
lb
Causative Forms
.........................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.36) 326
Class V, Subclass
2.......................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.37) 327
Class V, Subclass
3.......................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.38) 329
Class V, Subclass
4.......................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.39) 331
Class VI Active Verbs with a Present Theme in
ò-RT-mò
and
RT-coô
.........................................................................335
Class VI, Subclass
1 .....................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.40) 335
Class VI, Subclass 2a
....................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.41) 337
Class VI, Subclass 2b
...................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.42) 341
Class VI, Subclass
3 .....................................................................................................................
(Paradigm
1.43) 348
Class
VII
Active Verbs with a Present Theme in RT-08
..................................................................
(Paradigm
1.44) 351
Chapter
11:
The Second Diathesis
11.1.
Second Diathesis Dynamic Verbs
...............................................................................................................................359
11.1.1.
A Historical Analysis of Second Diathesis Verbs
.................................................................................................359
11.1.2.
The Correspondence of First and Second Diathesis Conjugation Classes
............................................................372
11.1.3.
The Conjugation Classes of Second Diathesis Verbs: Conversive Forms
............................................................376
Class I Conversive Verbs with a Present Theme in o/g-RT-gb-o
.....................................................
(Paradigm II.
1) 376
Class II
Subclass
1
Conversive Verbs with a Present Theme in
o/g-Rg
/оТ-дб-о
......................................(Paradigm
11.2) 379
Subclass
2
Conversive Verbs with a Present Theme in
o/g-RT
-дз-о
............................................(Paradigm II.
3) 385
Subclass 3a Conversive Verbs with a Present Theme in
o/g-RT
-дз-о
..........................................
(Paradigm
11.4) 389
Subclass 3b Conversive Verbs with a Present Theme in
o/g-RT
-дз-о
..........................................(Paradigm II.
5) 393
Class III
Subclass
1
Conversive Verbs with a Present Theme in
o/g-RöB/R-gö-o
.....................................
(Paradigm I 1.
6) 399
Subclass
2
Conversive Verbs with a Present Theme in
o/g-RT
-дб-о
............................................{Paradigm
11.7) 401
Subclass
3
Conversive Verbs with a Present Theme in
o/g-RB-gô-o
............................................(Paradigm
11.8) 402
Class IV
Subclass
1
Conversive Verbs with a Present Theme in
o/g-RT-gò-o
............................................
(Paradigm
11.9) 406
Subclass
2
Conversive Verbs with a Present Theme in o/g-RQT-gb-o
.......................................
(Paradigm II.
10) 411
Subclass
3
Conversive Verbs with a Present Theme in o/g-ROT-gb-o
.......................................
(Paradigm
11.11) 413
Subclass
4
Conversive Verbs with a Present Theme in o/g-R(3)6/6/<£>-g5-o
.............................
(Paradigm II.
12) 414
11.1.4.
Second Diathesis Verbs Created by the Suffix
-ςρ
................................................................................................417
Class V
Subclass
1
Dynamic Verbs with a Present Theme in
RT-ço-go-o
...............................................
(Paradigm
11.13) 417
Subclass
2
Dynamic Verbs with a Present Theme in PV=RT-go-g&-o
........................................
(Paradigm
11.14) 420
11.1.5.
Second Diathesis Indirect Transitive Forms
.........................................................................................................424
Class VI
Subclass
1
Conversive Verbs with a Present Theme in
g-RT-gö-o
.............................................
(Paradigm
11.15) 424
11.1.6.
Deponent Verbs: Passive Structure Verbs with Active Meaning
..........................................................................432
Class
Vi
Subclass
2
Conversive Verbs with a Present Theme in
o-RT
-дб-о
.............................................(Paradigm
11.16) 432
Subclass
3
Conversive Verbs with a Present Theme in o/g-R0T-g&-o
.......................................
(Paradigm
11.17) 437
11.1.7.
Markerless
собдбо-Туре
Verbs
.............................................................................................................................441
Class
VII
Subclass
1
Markerless Verbs with a Present Theme in
RT
-дб-о
.................................................(Paradigm
11.18) 441
Subclass
2
Markeriess Verbs with a Present Theme in
¿-RT
-дб-о
..............................................(Paradigm II.
19) 442
Subclasses 3a
&
3b Markerless Verbs with a Present Theme in
o/g-ROT-oô-o
...........
(Paradigms
11.20 & 1.21) 445
Class
VIII
Conversive Verbs with a Present Theme in
o/g-RT-8
-дб-о,
o/g-RT-6
-дз-о
.................
(Paradigm
11.22) 454
11.2.
Second Diathesis
Stative
Verbs
...................................................................................................................................457
11.2.1.
Class IX
Stative
Verbs with a Present Theme in (¿-)RT-o
.....................................................
(Paradigm
11.23) 457
Chapter
12:
The Third Diathesis
12.1.
Establishing Inversion as a Historical Phenomenon
....................................................................................................476
12.2.
The Conjugation Classes of Third Diathesis Verbs
..................................................................,..................................480
Type
1,
Ciasses
laand Iblnversive Verbs with a Present Theme in
òAg-RT-o
....................
(Paradigms III. I
&
Ш.2)
482
Type I, Classes 2a and 2b
Inversive
Verbs with a Present Theme in
à/b-RT-0/0/03
............
(Paradigms ¡II.
3 & 111.4) 486
Type I, Class
3
Inversive
Verbs like 8-0-9306-b
................................................................................
(Paradigm III.
5) 491
Type I, Class
4
Inversive
Verbs like 8-gbg<^-i
..................................................................................
(Paradigm 1II.6)
494
Type II, Class
1
Inversive
Verbs with a Present Theme in
¿-RT-go
...................................................
(Paradigm
111.7) 501
Type II, Classes 2a and 2b
Inversive
Verbs Formed from Causative Verbs
..........................
(Paradigms HI.
8 & 111.9) 504
Type III, Class
1
Inversive
Verbs Expressing a Mood or Disposition
..............................................
(Paradigm 111.
10) 507
Type III, Class
2
Inversive
Verbs Expressing an Opinion
................................................................
(Paradigm
111.11) 508
Type III, Class 3a
Inversive
Verbs Expressing Non-Volition
..........................................................
(Paradigm III.
12) 509
Type III, Class 3b
Inversive
Verbs Mainly Expressing Emotional States
........................................
(Paradigm III.
13) 515
Type III, Class
4:
Passive Structure Verbs Expressing Possibility
...................................................
(Paradigm
111.14) 519
Chapter
13:
Irregular Verbs
13.1.
Paradigms Containing
Suppletive
Forms
....................................................................................................................522
13.2.
Suppletive
Forms in Different Diathetic Realizations of a Verb
.................................................................................526
13.3.
Other Irregularities
......................................................................................................................................................527
Chapter I
4:
Conjoined Paradigms
14.1.
Conjoined Paradigms Expressing Register Shifts
.......................................................................................................530
14.1.1.
Conjoined Paradigms Expressing Reverence Towards the Subject
.........................................................................530
14.1.2.
Conjoined Paradigms Expressing Reverence Towards the Indirect Object
.............................................................531
14.1.3.
Conjoined Paradigms Expressing Reverence Towards the Subject or Addressess
..................................................532
14.1.4.
Conjoined Paradigms Expressing Derision Towards the Subject
.............................................................................533
14.2.
Conjoined Paradigms Expressing Volition
..................................................................................................................534
14.3.
Conjoined Paradigms Differentiated by the Number of their Arguments
...................................................................534
14.3.1.
Conjoined Paradigms Differentiated by the Number of the Subject
........................................................................534
14.3.2.
Conjoined Paradigms Differentiated by the Number of the Direct Object
...............................................................536
14.4.
Conjoined Paradigms Differentiated by the Class of their Arguments
........................................................................538
14.4.1.
Conjoined Paradigms Differentiated by the Animacy of the Direct Object
.............................................................538
14.4.2.
Conjoined Paradigms Differentiated by the Animacy of the Subject
.......................................................................540
Glossary
Linguistic Terminology Used in Text
..................................................................................................................................441
Index
Georgian Verbs Listed by Classification (Alphabetized by Root)
.......................................................................................569
Georgian Verbs Listed Alphabetically (Followed by Paradigm Assignment)
.....................................................................618
Appendix
The Structural Realization of First and Second Diathesis Verbs
..........................................................................................664
Tables of First and Second Diathesis Verbs
.........................................................................................................................689
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Melikʻišvili, Damana 1939- Humphries, J. Daniel Kupunia, Maia |
author_GND | (DE-588)139274790 |
author_facet | Melikʻišvili, Damana 1939- Humphries, J. Daniel Kupunia, Maia |
author_role | aut aut aut |
author_sort | Melikʻišvili, Damana 1939- |
author_variant | d m dm j d h jd jdh m k mk |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV035432512 |
callnumber-first | P - Language and Literature |
callnumber-label | PK9114 |
callnumber-raw | PK9114 |
callnumber-search | PK9114 |
callnumber-sort | PK 49114 |
callnumber-subject | PK - Indo-Iranian |
classification_rvk | EK 6790 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)317118863 (DE-599)BVBBV035432512 |
dewey-full | 499/.9695 |
dewey-hundreds | 400 - Language |
dewey-ones | 499 - Austronesian & other languages |
dewey-raw | 499/.9695 |
dewey-search | 499/.9695 |
dewey-sort | 3499 49695 |
dewey-tens | 490 - Other languages |
discipline | Außereuropäische Sprachen und Literaturen Literaturwissenschaft |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV035432512 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:35:08Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781931546515 |
language | English Georgian |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-017352878 |
oclc_num | 317118863 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-12 DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-83 DE-11 |
owner_facet | DE-12 DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-83 DE-11 |
physical | vi, 698 S. 29 cm |
publishDate | 2008 |
publishDateSearch | 2008 |
publishDateSort | 2008 |
publisher | Dunwoody Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Melikʻišvili, Damana 1939- Verfasser (DE-588)139274790 aut The Georgian verb a morphosyntactic analysis Damana Melikishvili , J. Daniel Humphries, Maia Kupunia Hyattsville, MD Dunwoody Press 2008 vi, 698 S. 29 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Includes indexes Georgian language / Verb Georgian language / Morphology Georgian language / Grammatical categories Hierarchy (Linguistics) Grammatik Georgian language Grammar Georgian language Verb Georgisch (DE-588)4124679-2 gnd rswk-swf Morphosyntax (DE-588)4114635-9 gnd rswk-swf Verb (DE-588)4062553-9 gnd rswk-swf Georgisch (DE-588)4124679-2 s Verb (DE-588)4062553-9 s Morphosyntax (DE-588)4114635-9 s DE-604 Humphries, J. Daniel Verfasser aut Kupunia, Maia Verfasser aut Digitalisierung UB Bamberg application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=017352878&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Melikʻišvili, Damana 1939- Humphries, J. Daniel Kupunia, Maia The Georgian verb a morphosyntactic analysis Georgian language / Verb Georgian language / Morphology Georgian language / Grammatical categories Hierarchy (Linguistics) Grammatik Georgian language Grammar Georgian language Verb Georgisch (DE-588)4124679-2 gnd Morphosyntax (DE-588)4114635-9 gnd Verb (DE-588)4062553-9 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4124679-2 (DE-588)4114635-9 (DE-588)4062553-9 |
title | The Georgian verb a morphosyntactic analysis |
title_auth | The Georgian verb a morphosyntactic analysis |
title_exact_search | The Georgian verb a morphosyntactic analysis |
title_full | The Georgian verb a morphosyntactic analysis Damana Melikishvili , J. Daniel Humphries, Maia Kupunia |
title_fullStr | The Georgian verb a morphosyntactic analysis Damana Melikishvili , J. Daniel Humphries, Maia Kupunia |
title_full_unstemmed | The Georgian verb a morphosyntactic analysis Damana Melikishvili , J. Daniel Humphries, Maia Kupunia |
title_short | The Georgian verb |
title_sort | the georgian verb a morphosyntactic analysis |
title_sub | a morphosyntactic analysis |
topic | Georgian language / Verb Georgian language / Morphology Georgian language / Grammatical categories Hierarchy (Linguistics) Grammatik Georgian language Grammar Georgian language Verb Georgisch (DE-588)4124679-2 gnd Morphosyntax (DE-588)4114635-9 gnd Verb (DE-588)4062553-9 gnd |
topic_facet | Georgian language / Verb Georgian language / Morphology Georgian language / Grammatical categories Hierarchy (Linguistics) Grammatik Georgian language Grammar Georgian language Verb Georgisch Morphosyntax Verb |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=017352878&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT melikʻisvilidamana thegeorgianverbamorphosyntacticanalysis AT humphriesjdaniel thegeorgianverbamorphosyntacticanalysis AT kupuniamaia thegeorgianverbamorphosyntacticanalysis |