Plus d’un million de livres, à portée de main !
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Björn Wiemer

    Resultativa in den nordslavischen und baltischen Sprachen
    Lexikalische Evidenzialitäts-Marker in slavischen Sprachen
    Grammatical replication and borrowability in language contact
    Studies on evidentiality marking in West and South Slavic
    Catching the elusive
    Clausal Complementation in South Slavic
    • 2023

      This volume assembles contributions addressing clausal complementation across the entire South Slavic territory. The main focus is on particular aspects of complementation, covering the contemporary standard languages as well as older stages and/or non-standard varieties and the impact of language contact, primarily with non-Slavic languages. Presenting in-depth studies, they thus contribute to the overarching collective aim of arriving at a comprehensive picture of the patterns of clausal complementation on which South Slavic languages profile against a wider typological background, but also diverge internally if we look closer at details in the contemporary stage and in diachronic development. The volume divides into an introduction setting the stage for the single case-studies, an article developing a general template of complementation with a detailed overview of the components relevant for South Slavic, studies addressing particular structural phenomena from different theoretical viewpoints, and articles focusing on variation in space and/or time.

      Clausal Complementation in South Slavic
    • 2018

      Evidentiality deals with the marking of information source, that is with means that specify how we come to know what we (think to) know. For instance, such means indicate whether knowledge derives from hearsay, or whether an inference has been based on perception or on knowledge about habits. Often these indications are vague. This book focuses on sentence adverbs and so-called function words in Slavic languages. Six of them were subject of a questionnaire survey, whose discussion, preceded by general methodological background, occupies the second part of this book. The first half contains a thorough consideration of notional links between evidentiality and related domains, first of all of epistemic modality, and it discusses the intricacies of doing lexicography of evidential marking.

      Catching the elusive
    • 2015

      This volume presents six studies examining evidential functions in Serbian, Slovak, and Polish, with contributions in English, Russian, and German. The focus for West Slavic languages includes sentential adverbs and function words, alongside the roots of evidential marking in clause-combining with perception or seem-verbs in Polish and Serbian, discussing varying degrees of conventionalization. One article specifically analyzes evidential extensions of past tense paradigms in Serbian through a questionnaire survey. Most articles adopt a synchronic perspective, primarily utilizing corpus data, while one study explores early "pre-evidential" stages in the development of the Polish comparison marker jakoby 'as if.' The relationship between evidentiality and epistemic meanings is addressed across all studies, with particular emphasis in two papers on Polish. A third Polish-focused paper offers new insights into 'distance' from a discourse perspective, partially linked to the lexical meaning of reportive sentence adverbs or particles.

      Studies on evidentiality marking in West and South Slavic
    • 2012

      The volume presents new insights into two basic theoretical issues hotly debated in recent work on grammaticalization and language contact: grammatical replication and grammatical borrowability. The key issues are: How can grammatical replication be distinguished from other, superficially similar processes of contact-induced linguistic change, and under what conditions does it take place? Are there grammatical morphemes or constructions that are more easily borrowed than others, and how can language contact account for areal biases in the borrowing (vs. calquing) of grammatical formatives? The book is a major contribution to the ongoing theoretical discussion concerning the relationship between grammaticalization and language contact on a broad empirical basis.

      Grammatical replication and borrowability in language contact
    • 2008