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SERBO-CROAT STUDIES: LANGUAGE

SERBO-CROAT STUDIES: LANGUAGE Slavonic Languages VII. SERBO-CROAT STUDIES LANGUAGE By TREVOR PRESTON, Research Student, School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University of London I. GENERAL There has appeared an anthology of 20 linguistic essays: Yugoslav General Linguistics, ed. M. Radovanovic, Amsterdam - Philadelphia, John Benjamins, viii + 381 pp., treating a variety of topics such as comparative typology, sociolinguistics and the philosophy of language science. D. Sipka discusses ways to improve the organi­ zation of material in dictionaries of different types in 'Za receptibilno­ aplikabilnu sistemnost pravopisnih pravila', Kj, 36: 2 1-26. There is an account by J. Moskovljevic, ib., 138-44, of experiments performed on ten-year-old children to test their ability to comprehend sentences of different structural complexity and to use the same structures in written form. B. Panzer has contributed a study on the derivation of SC verbs to H. Wiegand, Vortrage, Heidelberg, Max Niemeyer Verlag, xix + 296 pp. (191-206). 2. HISTORY OF THE LANGUAGE There are several etymological studies: I. Robciuc discusses certain controversial etymologies in Romanian with special reference to borrowings from SC and Ukrainian, SCL, 40: 36g-72; A. Sivic-Dular makes a semantic analysis of South Slav words containing the base *gat- and suggests an etymological connection http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png The Year’s Work in Modern Language Studies Brill

SERBO-CROAT STUDIES: LANGUAGE

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Publisher
Brill
Copyright
Copyright © Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands
ISSN
0084-4152
eISSN
2222-4297
DOI
10.1163/22224297-90003077
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Slavonic Languages VII. SERBO-CROAT STUDIES LANGUAGE By TREVOR PRESTON, Research Student, School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University of London I. GENERAL There has appeared an anthology of 20 linguistic essays: Yugoslav General Linguistics, ed. M. Radovanovic, Amsterdam - Philadelphia, John Benjamins, viii + 381 pp., treating a variety of topics such as comparative typology, sociolinguistics and the philosophy of language science. D. Sipka discusses ways to improve the organi­ zation of material in dictionaries of different types in 'Za receptibilno­ aplikabilnu sistemnost pravopisnih pravila', Kj, 36: 2 1-26. There is an account by J. Moskovljevic, ib., 138-44, of experiments performed on ten-year-old children to test their ability to comprehend sentences of different structural complexity and to use the same structures in written form. B. Panzer has contributed a study on the derivation of SC verbs to H. Wiegand, Vortrage, Heidelberg, Max Niemeyer Verlag, xix + 296 pp. (191-206). 2. HISTORY OF THE LANGUAGE There are several etymological studies: I. Robciuc discusses certain controversial etymologies in Romanian with special reference to borrowings from SC and Ukrainian, SCL, 40: 36g-72; A. Sivic-Dular makes a semantic analysis of South Slav words containing the base *gat- and suggests an etymological connection

Journal

The Year’s Work in Modern Language StudiesBrill

Published: Mar 13, 1990

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