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Remarks on the Phonological Evolution of Russian in Comparison with the Other Slavic Languages /

This is the first English translation of a groundbreaking 1929 work in historical phonology by the renowned linguist Roman Jakobson, considered the founder of modern structural linguistics. A revolutionary treatment of the phonological evolution of Russian in relation to other Slavic languages, the...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Jakobson, Roman, 1896-1982 (Autor)
Otros Autores: Feldstein, Ronald F. (Traductor)
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Francés
Publicado: Cambridge, MA : The MIT Press, [2018]
Colección:Book collections on Project MUSE.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Intro; Contents; Translator's Foreword: The Significance of Roman Jakobson's Remarks on the Phonological Evolution of Russian in Comparison with the Other Slavic Languages; Preliminary; Jakobson's Purpose; The Jakobson-Trubetzkoy Dialogue about Remarks; Jakobson's Methodology; Russian Unaccented Vowel Systems; Conclusion; Notes on Early Common Slavic to Late Common Slavic; Author's Preface; 1 Basic Principles; 1.1 Phonological System: The Phoneme; 1.2 Types of Phonological Oppositions: Correlations; 1.3 Paired and Unpaired Phonemes; 1.4 Relations between Disjunctive and Correlative Units
  • 1.5 The Archiphoneme and Its Variants1.6 Phonological System of Literary Russian; 1.7 Relations between Phonemic Variants and Archiphonemes; Annotations to Chapter 1, Basic Principles; 2 Remarks on Current Issues of Comparative Historical Phonology; 2.1 Extending the Use of Comparative Historical Methodology; 2.2 Contradiction (Antinomy) between Synchronic and Diachronic Linguistics and Ways of Overcoming It; 2.3 Typology of Changes; 2.4 Phonetic "Laws"; 2.5 Laws of Reciprocal Relations of Correlations; 2.6 Importance of Acoustics for Historical Phonology
  • Annotations to Chapter 2, Remarks on Current Issues of Comparative Historical Phonology3 Remarks on the Evolution of the Phonological System of Proto-Slavic; 3.1 First and Second Velar Palatalizations; 3.2 Influence of Palatal Consonants on Following Vowels; 3.3 Reciprocal Influence of Vowels and Liquids inside Diphthongs; 3.4 Influence of Vowels on Preceding Consonants; 3.5 Unification of the Syllable; 3.6 Ultimate Fate of the Products of Velar Palatalizations; 3.7 Diphthongs of Proto-Slavic; 3.8 Elimination of Homogeneous Diphthongs; 3.9 Evolution of Nasal Diphthongs
  • 3.10 Fundamental Tendency of Diphthongal Evolution3.11 Qualitative Differentiation of Long and Short Vowels; 3.12 Evolution of "Long Vowel + n" Diphthongs; 3.13 Restructuring of Quantitative Relations; 3.14 Redistribution of Prothetic Consonants and Its Consequences; 3.15 System of Palatal Consonants and Dialect Variations in Their Evolution; 3.16 Dialect Differences in the System of Vowels in Sequences with Paired Softs and the Treatment of the Affricate ʒ; 3.17 Link between the Fate of ě and the Dialectal Treatment of the Sequence ʒ'ä
  • 3.18 Dependency of Nasal Diphthong Evolution on the Treatment of ě (jat')3.19 Limitation of the Role of j; Annotations to Chapter 3, Remarks on the Evolution of the Phonological System of Proto-Slavic; 4 The Proto-East-Slavic Change of Initial je- to o- and Similar Developments in the Other Slavic Languages; 4.1 Reason for the Change of Initial je- to o-; 4.2 Conditions for the Loss of j- When Preceding e in Word-Initial Position; 4.3 A Bulgarian Parallel; 4.4 A Sorbian Parallel; 4.5 A Czecho-Slovak Parallel