Ancient Greek Verb-Initial Compounds : Their Diachronic Development Within the Greek Compound System /
This book provides a study of the diachronic development of compounds with a verbal first constituent in Ancient Greek. Based on an unprecedentedly comprehensive corpus of such compounds, it offers detailed treatments of their origins, structure and place within the Greek compound system, as well as...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Berlin ; New York :
Walter de Gruyter,
[2015]
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- List of tables; Abbreviations; General abbreviations; Signs and symbols; Bibliographical abbreviations; Ancient authors and works; Introduction; 1 Overview; 2 Studying AG V1 compounds: scope and aims; 3 Methodology: V1 compounds in the context of the AG compound system; 4 The Corpus; 5 Structure (i): Defining compounding and compound categories; 6 Structure (ii): The historical perspective; 7 Structure (iii): The use of V1 compounds in context; Chapter One. Compounding and the Classification of Compounds; 1 Introduction; 2 Compounds and compounding; 3 The definition of compounds.
- 3.1 Defining criteria: spelling, stress, inflectional markers4 Ancient Greek compounding as stem compounding; 4.1 A typical morphophonological feature: the linking vowel; 4.2 Vocalic encounters: hiatus, elision, contraction and lengthening; 4.3 Phonological features: accent; 4.4 Writing of Greek compounds; 5 Semantic approaches to compounding; 5.1 Lexicalization and idiomaticity; 5.2 Lexicalization and idiomaticity in Ancient Greek; 6 Syntactic approaches to compounding; 6.1 Synthetic compounds; 6.2 Romance compounds; 6.3 Recursiveness in compounding.
- 6.4 Syntactic approaches to Ancient Greek compounding: inflected FCs and univerbations6.5 Summary; 7 Towards the classification of compounds: basic criteria; 7.1 Heads, headedness and related issues; 7.2 Endocentric and exocentric compounds; 7.3 Right-headed and left-headed compounds; 7.4 Summary; 7.5 Syntax and semantics as classificatory criteria; 8 A model of classification; 8.1 Subordinated and coordinated as the two fundamental categories; 9 The classification of Ancient Greek compounds: introductory issues; 9.1 Classic approaches: from Sanskrit to Greek.
- 9.2 Rektion, government, verbal nexus9.3 Endocentric and exocentric in the Greek compound system; 9.4 Right-oriented and left-oriented compounds; 10 Conclusion; Chapter Two. The Compound Categories of Ancient Greek; 1 Introduction; 2 Coordinated compounds; 2.1 Classification issues: endocentric and exocentric coordinated compounds; 2.2 Coordinated compounds in Greek; 3 Iterative compounds; 3.1 Iterative compounds in Greek; 4 Subordinated compounds; 4.1 Right-oriented endocentric determinative compounds in Greek; 4.2 [N N]N endocentric determinative compounds.
- 4.3 [A N]N endocentric determinative compounds4.4 [P N]N endocentric determinative compounds; 4.5 [Num N]N endocentric determinative compounds; 4.6 [P A]A, [A A]A and [N A]A endocentric determinative compounds; 4.7 Overview of the development of right-oriented endocentric determinative compounds in Greek; 5 Right-oriented exocentric determinative compounds (bahuvrihis); 5.1 Structure, suffixes and accent; 5.2 The relationship between bahuvrihis and determinative compounds; 5.3 Types and productivity of bahuvrihis; 5.4 Metaphorical function of the FC; 6 V2 compounds.