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RUSSIAN STUDIES: LANGUAGE

RUSSIAN STUDIES: LANGUAGE 1082 Slavonic Languages IV. RUSSIAN STUDIES* GENERAL REFERENCE AND BIBLIOGRAPHICAL WORKS POSTPONED LANGUAGE By DA VID KILBY, University of Essex I. HISTORY OF LINGUISTICS The major Russian grammar of A. A. Barsov, hitherto unpublished, is now available in two editions, The Comprehensive Russian Grammar of A. A. Barsov, ed. L. W. Newman, Columbus, Slavica, 1980, has a very helpful introductory essay, and attempts to reconstruct the grammar from available sources as B. might have conceived it. POCCUUC'KaR zpaMMamu'Ka AnmO'lta AAe'KCee8U1la oapco8a, ed. B. A. Uspensky, Mw, 1134-BO MfY, 776 pp., has a shorter, though still useful, introduction and includes all of the available versions, including repetitions. Johann Biedermann, Grammatiktheorie und grammatische Deskription in Russland in deT 2. Hiilfle des 18. und zu Anfang des 19. Jahrhunderts (EH, XVI, 17), 166 pp., is on the same period, and surveys developments in the description of nominal elements, and the influence of General Grammar. Similarly on this period is J. E. M. Clarke, 'From the history of Russian linguistics: Karamzin's analysis of the pre-literary state of the Slavonic languages', RLing, 5: 235-44. 2. PHONOLOGY D. S. Worth, 'The French Captain's Russian', RLing, 5: 199-210, uses a rather inexpert word list compiled by http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png The Year’s Work in Modern Language Studies Brill

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Publisher
Brill
Copyright
Copyright © Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands
ISSN
0084-4152
eISSN
2222-4297
DOI
10.1163/22224297-90003664
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

1082 Slavonic Languages IV. RUSSIAN STUDIES* GENERAL REFERENCE AND BIBLIOGRAPHICAL WORKS POSTPONED LANGUAGE By DA VID KILBY, University of Essex I. HISTORY OF LINGUISTICS The major Russian grammar of A. A. Barsov, hitherto unpublished, is now available in two editions, The Comprehensive Russian Grammar of A. A. Barsov, ed. L. W. Newman, Columbus, Slavica, 1980, has a very helpful introductory essay, and attempts to reconstruct the grammar from available sources as B. might have conceived it. POCCUUC'KaR zpaMMamu'Ka AnmO'lta AAe'KCee8U1la oapco8a, ed. B. A. Uspensky, Mw, 1134-BO MfY, 776 pp., has a shorter, though still useful, introduction and includes all of the available versions, including repetitions. Johann Biedermann, Grammatiktheorie und grammatische Deskription in Russland in deT 2. Hiilfle des 18. und zu Anfang des 19. Jahrhunderts (EH, XVI, 17), 166 pp., is on the same period, and surveys developments in the description of nominal elements, and the influence of General Grammar. Similarly on this period is J. E. M. Clarke, 'From the history of Russian linguistics: Karamzin's analysis of the pre-literary state of the Slavonic languages', RLing, 5: 235-44. 2. PHONOLOGY D. S. Worth, 'The French Captain's Russian', RLing, 5: 199-210, uses a rather inexpert word list compiled by

Journal

The Year’s Work in Modern Language StudiesBrill

Published: Mar 13, 1982

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