Competing comparative constructions in Europe:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | German |
Veröffentlicht: |
[Düsseldorf]
Akademie Verlag
[2013]
|
Schriftenreihe: | Studia typologica
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | FAW01 FAW02 |
Beschreibung: | Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (ebrary, viewed January 6, 2014) |
Beschreibung: | 1 online resource (385 pages) |
ISBN: | 9783050063140 9783050064994 3050064994 3050063149 |
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505 | 8 | |a Preface and Acknowledgments; Abbreviations; 1 Introduction; 2 Basics; 2.1 Our starter kit: possible vs. realized types; 2.2 Diversity and variation; 2.3 Secondary options/multiple options; 3 Areal distribution; 4 Language contact; 5 Contemporary Europe; 5.1 Distribution: the genetic perspective; 5.1.1 Germanic; 5.1.1.1 Glimpses of the dichotomy of analytic vs. synthetic DEGREE marking in Germanic; 5.1.1.2 High-contact varieties vs. low-contact variety: Cymbrian/Yiddish vs. Icelandic; 5.1.2 Romance; 5.1.2.1 The que/di-divide; 5.1.2.2 In the Balkans; 5.1.3 Slavic; 5.1.3.1 Back to the Balkans | |
505 | 8 | |a 5.1.3.2 Multitudes of constructions5.1.4 Sundry Indo-European languages; 5.1.4.1 Baltic and Celtic issues; 5.1.4.2 Unitary vs. multiple options; 5.1.4.3 Optional DEGREE marking; 5.1.5 Indo-European languages of Europe: intermediate results; 5.1.6 Non-Indo-European languages; 5.1.6.1 Competition of schemata; 5.1.6.2 Beyond Harry Potter; 5.1.6.3 Uralic; 5.1.6.4 Kalmyk and Greenlandic; 5.1.7 Non-Indo-European languages of Europe: intermediate results; 5.1.8 Indo-European vs. non-Indo-European languages; 5.2 Division of labor; 5.2.1 TIES and STANDARDS; 5.2.1.1 The equative-pro-COI construction | |
505 | 8 | |a 5.2.1.2 The quantitative side of variation5.2.1.3 Qualities; 5.2.1.4 South Slavic languages; 5.2.1.5 Albanian and Romance; 5.2.1.6 Crosscheck; 5.2.1.7 Group I: case inflection vs. conjunction; 5.2.1.8 Group II: adposition vs. conjunction; 5.2.1.9 Ukrainian: a plethora of constructions; 5.2.1.10 Slovak: conjunction vs. conjunction (and some prepositional TIES); 5.2.1.11 Where Harry Potter keeps silent about COI constructions; 5.2.1.12 On the differential behavior of B2 and B3; 5.2.1.13 Conclusions on TIE-variation; 5.2.2 DEGREE marking; 5.3 Geography; 5.3.1 The equative-pro-COI isogloss | |
505 | 8 | |a 5.3.2 Event schemata5.3.3 DEGREE marking in areal perspective; 5.3.4 The internal geolinguistics of Europe; 5.3.5 HintermHorizont geht's weiter; 6 Change and contact; 6.1 Linguistic antiquity outside Europe; 6.2 Europe in days gone by; 6.3 Motives for change; 6.3.1 Likely and unlikely chronologies; 6.3.2 Towards an explanation; 7 Some answers and yet more questions; Appendix; A: Sample sentences taken from source text HP I English; B: Sample sentences taken from source text LPP French; C1:Germanic phylum; C2: Romance phylum; C3: Slavic phylum; C4: Sundry Indo-European languages | |
505 | 8 | |a C5:Non-Indo-European languagesD: Equative vs. comparative inequality; E: Primary vs. secondary/tertiary options in HP I; F: Translation strategies in sample languages which supposedly only have one COI construction; G: TIE-marker differences in the translations of B1-B5; H: Non-European control sample; I: Extinct non-European languages and old stages of non-European languages; J: Extinct European languages and older stages of European languages; K: Maps; Sources; References; Index of authors; Index of languages; Index of subjects | |
505 | 8 | |a Diese arealtypologische Studie untersucht die grammatischen Mittel, die in den Sprachen Europas verwendet werden, um den Komparativ der Ungleichheit/Überlegenheit auszudrücken. Die bestehenden Theorien und Hypothesen über die morphosyntaktische Struktur und die crosslinguistische Verteilung von Konstruktionstypen werden durchgemustert; das Verhalten von Komparativen unter den Bedingungen des Sprachkontakts wird diskutiert. Dabei werden Daten aus mehr als 170 Standard- und Nichtstandardvarietäten europäischer Sprachen systematisch untersucht. Das synchrone Bild wird um Überlegungen zur die Diac | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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any_adam_object | |
author | Stolz, Thomas |
author_facet | Stolz, Thomas |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Stolz, Thomas |
author_variant | t s ts |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV043783018 |
collection | ZDB-4-EBA |
contents | Preface and Acknowledgments; Abbreviations; 1 Introduction; 2 Basics; 2.1 Our starter kit: possible vs. realized types; 2.2 Diversity and variation; 2.3 Secondary options/multiple options; 3 Areal distribution; 4 Language contact; 5 Contemporary Europe; 5.1 Distribution: the genetic perspective; 5.1.1 Germanic; 5.1.1.1 Glimpses of the dichotomy of analytic vs. synthetic DEGREE marking in Germanic; 5.1.1.2 High-contact varieties vs. low-contact variety: Cymbrian/Yiddish vs. Icelandic; 5.1.2 Romance; 5.1.2.1 The que/di-divide; 5.1.2.2 In the Balkans; 5.1.3 Slavic; 5.1.3.1 Back to the Balkans 5.1.3.2 Multitudes of constructions5.1.4 Sundry Indo-European languages; 5.1.4.1 Baltic and Celtic issues; 5.1.4.2 Unitary vs. multiple options; 5.1.4.3 Optional DEGREE marking; 5.1.5 Indo-European languages of Europe: intermediate results; 5.1.6 Non-Indo-European languages; 5.1.6.1 Competition of schemata; 5.1.6.2 Beyond Harry Potter; 5.1.6.3 Uralic; 5.1.6.4 Kalmyk and Greenlandic; 5.1.7 Non-Indo-European languages of Europe: intermediate results; 5.1.8 Indo-European vs. non-Indo-European languages; 5.2 Division of labor; 5.2.1 TIES and STANDARDS; 5.2.1.1 The equative-pro-COI construction 5.2.1.2 The quantitative side of variation5.2.1.3 Qualities; 5.2.1.4 South Slavic languages; 5.2.1.5 Albanian and Romance; 5.2.1.6 Crosscheck; 5.2.1.7 Group I: case inflection vs. conjunction; 5.2.1.8 Group II: adposition vs. conjunction; 5.2.1.9 Ukrainian: a plethora of constructions; 5.2.1.10 Slovak: conjunction vs. conjunction (and some prepositional TIES); 5.2.1.11 Where Harry Potter keeps silent about COI constructions; 5.2.1.12 On the differential behavior of B2 and B3; 5.2.1.13 Conclusions on TIE-variation; 5.2.2 DEGREE marking; 5.3 Geography; 5.3.1 The equative-pro-COI isogloss 5.3.2 Event schemata5.3.3 DEGREE marking in areal perspective; 5.3.4 The internal geolinguistics of Europe; 5.3.5 HintermHorizont geht's weiter; 6 Change and contact; 6.1 Linguistic antiquity outside Europe; 6.2 Europe in days gone by; 6.3 Motives for change; 6.3.1 Likely and unlikely chronologies; 6.3.2 Towards an explanation; 7 Some answers and yet more questions; Appendix; A: Sample sentences taken from source text HP I English; B: Sample sentences taken from source text LPP French; C1:Germanic phylum; C2: Romance phylum; C3: Slavic phylum; C4: Sundry Indo-European languages C5:Non-Indo-European languagesD: Equative vs. comparative inequality; E: Primary vs. secondary/tertiary options in HP I; F: Translation strategies in sample languages which supposedly only have one COI construction; G: TIE-marker differences in the translations of B1-B5; H: Non-European control sample; I: Extinct non-European languages and old stages of non-European languages; J: Extinct European languages and older stages of European languages; K: Maps; Sources; References; Index of authors; Index of languages; Index of subjects Diese arealtypologische Studie untersucht die grammatischen Mittel, die in den Sprachen Europas verwendet werden, um den Komparativ der Ungleichheit/Überlegenheit auszudrücken. Die bestehenden Theorien und Hypothesen über die morphosyntaktische Struktur und die crosslinguistische Verteilung von Konstruktionstypen werden durchgemustert; das Verhalten von Komparativen unter den Bedingungen des Sprachkontakts wird diskutiert. Dabei werden Daten aus mehr als 170 Standard- und Nichtstandardvarietäten europäischer Sprachen systematisch untersucht. Das synchrone Bild wird um Überlegungen zur die Diac |
ctrlnum | (ZDB-4-EBA)ocn891655959 (OCoLC)891655959 (DE-599)BVBBV043783018 |
dewey-full | 950.4 |
dewey-hundreds | 900 - History & geography |
dewey-ones | 950 - History of Asia |
dewey-raw | 950.4 |
dewey-search | 950.4 |
dewey-sort | 3950.4 |
dewey-tens | 950 - History of Asia |
discipline | Geschichte |
era | Geschichte 1900-2000 |
era_facet | Geschichte 1900-2000 |
format | Electronic eBook |
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geographic | Asien Europa Europa (DE-588)4015701-5 gnd |
geographic_facet | Asien Europa |
id | DE-604.BV043783018 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T07:34:59Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9783050063140 9783050064994 3050064994 3050063149 |
language | German |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-029194078 |
oclc_num | 891655959 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-1046 DE-1047 |
owner_facet | DE-1046 DE-1047 |
physical | 1 online resource (385 pages) |
psigel | ZDB-4-EBA ZDB-4-EBA FAW_PDA_EBA |
publishDate | 2013 |
publishDateSearch | 2013 |
publishDateSort | 2013 |
publisher | Akademie Verlag |
record_format | marc |
series2 | Studia typologica |
spelling | Stolz, Thomas Verfasser aut Competing comparative constructions in Europe Thomas Stolz [Düsseldorf] Akademie Verlag [2013] © 2013 1 online resource (385 pages) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Studia typologica Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (ebrary, viewed January 6, 2014) Preface and Acknowledgments; Abbreviations; 1 Introduction; 2 Basics; 2.1 Our starter kit: possible vs. realized types; 2.2 Diversity and variation; 2.3 Secondary options/multiple options; 3 Areal distribution; 4 Language contact; 5 Contemporary Europe; 5.1 Distribution: the genetic perspective; 5.1.1 Germanic; 5.1.1.1 Glimpses of the dichotomy of analytic vs. synthetic DEGREE marking in Germanic; 5.1.1.2 High-contact varieties vs. low-contact variety: Cymbrian/Yiddish vs. Icelandic; 5.1.2 Romance; 5.1.2.1 The que/di-divide; 5.1.2.2 In the Balkans; 5.1.3 Slavic; 5.1.3.1 Back to the Balkans 5.1.3.2 Multitudes of constructions5.1.4 Sundry Indo-European languages; 5.1.4.1 Baltic and Celtic issues; 5.1.4.2 Unitary vs. multiple options; 5.1.4.3 Optional DEGREE marking; 5.1.5 Indo-European languages of Europe: intermediate results; 5.1.6 Non-Indo-European languages; 5.1.6.1 Competition of schemata; 5.1.6.2 Beyond Harry Potter; 5.1.6.3 Uralic; 5.1.6.4 Kalmyk and Greenlandic; 5.1.7 Non-Indo-European languages of Europe: intermediate results; 5.1.8 Indo-European vs. non-Indo-European languages; 5.2 Division of labor; 5.2.1 TIES and STANDARDS; 5.2.1.1 The equative-pro-COI construction 5.2.1.2 The quantitative side of variation5.2.1.3 Qualities; 5.2.1.4 South Slavic languages; 5.2.1.5 Albanian and Romance; 5.2.1.6 Crosscheck; 5.2.1.7 Group I: case inflection vs. conjunction; 5.2.1.8 Group II: adposition vs. conjunction; 5.2.1.9 Ukrainian: a plethora of constructions; 5.2.1.10 Slovak: conjunction vs. conjunction (and some prepositional TIES); 5.2.1.11 Where Harry Potter keeps silent about COI constructions; 5.2.1.12 On the differential behavior of B2 and B3; 5.2.1.13 Conclusions on TIE-variation; 5.2.2 DEGREE marking; 5.3 Geography; 5.3.1 The equative-pro-COI isogloss 5.3.2 Event schemata5.3.3 DEGREE marking in areal perspective; 5.3.4 The internal geolinguistics of Europe; 5.3.5 HintermHorizont geht's weiter; 6 Change and contact; 6.1 Linguistic antiquity outside Europe; 6.2 Europe in days gone by; 6.3 Motives for change; 6.3.1 Likely and unlikely chronologies; 6.3.2 Towards an explanation; 7 Some answers and yet more questions; Appendix; A: Sample sentences taken from source text HP I English; B: Sample sentences taken from source text LPP French; C1:Germanic phylum; C2: Romance phylum; C3: Slavic phylum; C4: Sundry Indo-European languages C5:Non-Indo-European languagesD: Equative vs. comparative inequality; E: Primary vs. secondary/tertiary options in HP I; F: Translation strategies in sample languages which supposedly only have one COI construction; G: TIE-marker differences in the translations of B1-B5; H: Non-European control sample; I: Extinct non-European languages and old stages of non-European languages; J: Extinct European languages and older stages of European languages; K: Maps; Sources; References; Index of authors; Index of languages; Index of subjects Diese arealtypologische Studie untersucht die grammatischen Mittel, die in den Sprachen Europas verwendet werden, um den Komparativ der Ungleichheit/Überlegenheit auszudrücken. Die bestehenden Theorien und Hypothesen über die morphosyntaktische Struktur und die crosslinguistische Verteilung von Konstruktionstypen werden durchgemustert; das Verhalten von Komparativen unter den Bedingungen des Sprachkontakts wird diskutiert. Dabei werden Daten aus mehr als 170 Standard- und Nichtstandardvarietäten europäischer Sprachen systematisch untersucht. Das synchrone Bild wird um Überlegungen zur die Diac Geschichte 1900-2000 Europe / Social conditions / 20th century HISTORY / Asia / General bisacsh Areal linguistics fast Comparative linguistics fast Language and languages / Variation fast Languages in contact fast Sprache Comparison (Grammar) Indo-European languages Comparison Sprachtypologie (DE-588)4056503-8 gnd rswk-swf Ungleichheit (DE-588)4186884-5 gnd rswk-swf Komparation (DE-588)4131615-0 gnd rswk-swf Konstruktion Linguistik (DE-588)4165097-9 gnd rswk-swf Überlegenheit (DE-588)4264065-9 gnd rswk-swf Sprache (DE-588)4056449-6 gnd rswk-swf Komparativ (DE-588)4164861-4 gnd rswk-swf Arealtypologie (DE-588)4257110-8 gnd rswk-swf Asien Europa Europa (DE-588)4015701-5 gnd rswk-swf Europa (DE-588)4015701-5 g Sprache (DE-588)4056449-6 s Überlegenheit (DE-588)4264065-9 s Ungleichheit (DE-588)4186884-5 s Komparativ (DE-588)4164861-4 s Arealtypologie (DE-588)4257110-8 s 1\p DE-604 Komparation (DE-588)4131615-0 s Konstruktion Linguistik (DE-588)4165097-9 s Sprachtypologie (DE-588)4056503-8 s 2\p DE-604 Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Stolz, Thomas Competing Comparative Constructions in Europe 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk 2\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Stolz, Thomas Competing comparative constructions in Europe Preface and Acknowledgments; Abbreviations; 1 Introduction; 2 Basics; 2.1 Our starter kit: possible vs. realized types; 2.2 Diversity and variation; 2.3 Secondary options/multiple options; 3 Areal distribution; 4 Language contact; 5 Contemporary Europe; 5.1 Distribution: the genetic perspective; 5.1.1 Germanic; 5.1.1.1 Glimpses of the dichotomy of analytic vs. synthetic DEGREE marking in Germanic; 5.1.1.2 High-contact varieties vs. low-contact variety: Cymbrian/Yiddish vs. Icelandic; 5.1.2 Romance; 5.1.2.1 The que/di-divide; 5.1.2.2 In the Balkans; 5.1.3 Slavic; 5.1.3.1 Back to the Balkans 5.1.3.2 Multitudes of constructions5.1.4 Sundry Indo-European languages; 5.1.4.1 Baltic and Celtic issues; 5.1.4.2 Unitary vs. multiple options; 5.1.4.3 Optional DEGREE marking; 5.1.5 Indo-European languages of Europe: intermediate results; 5.1.6 Non-Indo-European languages; 5.1.6.1 Competition of schemata; 5.1.6.2 Beyond Harry Potter; 5.1.6.3 Uralic; 5.1.6.4 Kalmyk and Greenlandic; 5.1.7 Non-Indo-European languages of Europe: intermediate results; 5.1.8 Indo-European vs. non-Indo-European languages; 5.2 Division of labor; 5.2.1 TIES and STANDARDS; 5.2.1.1 The equative-pro-COI construction 5.2.1.2 The quantitative side of variation5.2.1.3 Qualities; 5.2.1.4 South Slavic languages; 5.2.1.5 Albanian and Romance; 5.2.1.6 Crosscheck; 5.2.1.7 Group I: case inflection vs. conjunction; 5.2.1.8 Group II: adposition vs. conjunction; 5.2.1.9 Ukrainian: a plethora of constructions; 5.2.1.10 Slovak: conjunction vs. conjunction (and some prepositional TIES); 5.2.1.11 Where Harry Potter keeps silent about COI constructions; 5.2.1.12 On the differential behavior of B2 and B3; 5.2.1.13 Conclusions on TIE-variation; 5.2.2 DEGREE marking; 5.3 Geography; 5.3.1 The equative-pro-COI isogloss 5.3.2 Event schemata5.3.3 DEGREE marking in areal perspective; 5.3.4 The internal geolinguistics of Europe; 5.3.5 HintermHorizont geht's weiter; 6 Change and contact; 6.1 Linguistic antiquity outside Europe; 6.2 Europe in days gone by; 6.3 Motives for change; 6.3.1 Likely and unlikely chronologies; 6.3.2 Towards an explanation; 7 Some answers and yet more questions; Appendix; A: Sample sentences taken from source text HP I English; B: Sample sentences taken from source text LPP French; C1:Germanic phylum; C2: Romance phylum; C3: Slavic phylum; C4: Sundry Indo-European languages C5:Non-Indo-European languagesD: Equative vs. comparative inequality; E: Primary vs. secondary/tertiary options in HP I; F: Translation strategies in sample languages which supposedly only have one COI construction; G: TIE-marker differences in the translations of B1-B5; H: Non-European control sample; I: Extinct non-European languages and old stages of non-European languages; J: Extinct European languages and older stages of European languages; K: Maps; Sources; References; Index of authors; Index of languages; Index of subjects Diese arealtypologische Studie untersucht die grammatischen Mittel, die in den Sprachen Europas verwendet werden, um den Komparativ der Ungleichheit/Überlegenheit auszudrücken. Die bestehenden Theorien und Hypothesen über die morphosyntaktische Struktur und die crosslinguistische Verteilung von Konstruktionstypen werden durchgemustert; das Verhalten von Komparativen unter den Bedingungen des Sprachkontakts wird diskutiert. Dabei werden Daten aus mehr als 170 Standard- und Nichtstandardvarietäten europäischer Sprachen systematisch untersucht. Das synchrone Bild wird um Überlegungen zur die Diac Europe / Social conditions / 20th century HISTORY / Asia / General bisacsh Areal linguistics fast Comparative linguistics fast Language and languages / Variation fast Languages in contact fast Sprache Comparison (Grammar) Indo-European languages Comparison Sprachtypologie (DE-588)4056503-8 gnd Ungleichheit (DE-588)4186884-5 gnd Komparation (DE-588)4131615-0 gnd Konstruktion Linguistik (DE-588)4165097-9 gnd Überlegenheit (DE-588)4264065-9 gnd Sprache (DE-588)4056449-6 gnd Komparativ (DE-588)4164861-4 gnd Arealtypologie (DE-588)4257110-8 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4056503-8 (DE-588)4186884-5 (DE-588)4131615-0 (DE-588)4165097-9 (DE-588)4264065-9 (DE-588)4056449-6 (DE-588)4164861-4 (DE-588)4257110-8 (DE-588)4015701-5 |
title | Competing comparative constructions in Europe |
title_auth | Competing comparative constructions in Europe |
title_exact_search | Competing comparative constructions in Europe |
title_full | Competing comparative constructions in Europe Thomas Stolz |
title_fullStr | Competing comparative constructions in Europe Thomas Stolz |
title_full_unstemmed | Competing comparative constructions in Europe Thomas Stolz |
title_short | Competing comparative constructions in Europe |
title_sort | competing comparative constructions in europe |
topic | Europe / Social conditions / 20th century HISTORY / Asia / General bisacsh Areal linguistics fast Comparative linguistics fast Language and languages / Variation fast Languages in contact fast Sprache Comparison (Grammar) Indo-European languages Comparison Sprachtypologie (DE-588)4056503-8 gnd Ungleichheit (DE-588)4186884-5 gnd Komparation (DE-588)4131615-0 gnd Konstruktion Linguistik (DE-588)4165097-9 gnd Überlegenheit (DE-588)4264065-9 gnd Sprache (DE-588)4056449-6 gnd Komparativ (DE-588)4164861-4 gnd Arealtypologie (DE-588)4257110-8 gnd |
topic_facet | Europe / Social conditions / 20th century HISTORY / Asia / General Areal linguistics Comparative linguistics Language and languages / Variation Languages in contact Sprache Comparison (Grammar) Indo-European languages Comparison Sprachtypologie Ungleichheit Komparation Konstruktion Linguistik Überlegenheit Komparativ Arealtypologie Asien Europa |
work_keys_str_mv | AT stolzthomas competingcomparativeconstructionsineurope |