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Prezidentskie vybory vs. vybory prezidenta: how to choose? / Janda, Laura A.; Nesset, Tore; Say, Sergey.

в: Russian Linguistics, Том 43, № 3, 01.11.2019, стр. 181-204.

Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданияхстатьяРецензирование

Harvard

Janda, LA, Nesset, T & Say, S 2019, 'Prezidentskie vybory vs. vybory prezidenta: how to choose?', Russian Linguistics, Том. 43, № 3, стр. 181-204. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11185-019-09214-w

APA

Vancouver

Janda LA, Nesset T, Say S. Prezidentskie vybory vs. vybory prezidenta: how to choose? Russian Linguistics. 2019 Нояб. 1;43(3):181-204. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11185-019-09214-w

Author

Janda, Laura A. ; Nesset, Tore ; Say, Sergey. / Prezidentskie vybory vs. vybory prezidenta: how to choose?. в: Russian Linguistics. 2019 ; Том 43, № 3. стр. 181-204.

BibTeX

@article{73058ff4d78c432087ca2267e839113a,
title = "Prezidentskie vybory vs. vybory prezidenta: how to choose?",
abstract = "We present three case studies of the distribution of adjective + head noun ({\textquoteleft}adjective{\textquoteright}) vs. head noun + noun-genitive ({\textquoteleft}genitive{\textquoteright}) constructions based on datasets extracted from the Russian National Corpus. Each case study focuses on a different set of non-head referents: case study 1 examines non-heads that are country names (like {\textquoteleft}Norway{\textquoteright} as in norve{\v z}skij N vs. N Norvegii), case study 2 looks at non-heads that refer to leaders (like {\textquoteleft}president{\textquoteright} as in prezidentskij N vs. N prezidenta), and the focus of case study 3 is non-heads that are person names (like {\textquoteleft}Petja{\textquoteright} as in Petina N vs. N Peti). Head nouns in all three datasets were annotated for the same set of nine semantic categories representing an Individuation Hierarchy. This hierarchy accounts for only some of the patterns that we see across the case studies. Other patterns can be explained in terms of: {\textquoteleft}uniqueness{\textquoteright}, which favors the genitive construction when the head noun is a unique entity; {\textquoteleft}salience{\textquoteright}, which favors the genitive construction when the non-head is more salient than the head noun; and {\textquoteleft}obligatoriness{\textquoteright}, which favors the genitive construction when the head is a relational noun that presupposes a specific non-head.",
author = "Janda, {Laura A.} and Tore Nesset and Sergey Say",
year = "2019",
month = nov,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1007/s11185-019-09214-w",
language = "English",
volume = "43",
pages = "181--204",
journal = "Russian Linguistics",
issn = "0304-3487",
publisher = "Springer Nature",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Prezidentskie vybory vs. vybory prezidenta: how to choose?

AU - Janda, Laura A.

AU - Nesset, Tore

AU - Say, Sergey

PY - 2019/11/1

Y1 - 2019/11/1

N2 - We present three case studies of the distribution of adjective + head noun (‘adjective’) vs. head noun + noun-genitive (‘genitive’) constructions based on datasets extracted from the Russian National Corpus. Each case study focuses on a different set of non-head referents: case study 1 examines non-heads that are country names (like ‘Norway’ as in norvežskij N vs. N Norvegii), case study 2 looks at non-heads that refer to leaders (like ‘president’ as in prezidentskij N vs. N prezidenta), and the focus of case study 3 is non-heads that are person names (like ‘Petja’ as in Petina N vs. N Peti). Head nouns in all three datasets were annotated for the same set of nine semantic categories representing an Individuation Hierarchy. This hierarchy accounts for only some of the patterns that we see across the case studies. Other patterns can be explained in terms of: ‘uniqueness’, which favors the genitive construction when the head noun is a unique entity; ‘salience’, which favors the genitive construction when the non-head is more salient than the head noun; and ‘obligatoriness’, which favors the genitive construction when the head is a relational noun that presupposes a specific non-head.

AB - We present three case studies of the distribution of adjective + head noun (‘adjective’) vs. head noun + noun-genitive (‘genitive’) constructions based on datasets extracted from the Russian National Corpus. Each case study focuses on a different set of non-head referents: case study 1 examines non-heads that are country names (like ‘Norway’ as in norvežskij N vs. N Norvegii), case study 2 looks at non-heads that refer to leaders (like ‘president’ as in prezidentskij N vs. N prezidenta), and the focus of case study 3 is non-heads that are person names (like ‘Petja’ as in Petina N vs. N Peti). Head nouns in all three datasets were annotated for the same set of nine semantic categories representing an Individuation Hierarchy. This hierarchy accounts for only some of the patterns that we see across the case studies. Other patterns can be explained in terms of: ‘uniqueness’, which favors the genitive construction when the head noun is a unique entity; ‘salience’, which favors the genitive construction when the non-head is more salient than the head noun; and ‘obligatoriness’, which favors the genitive construction when the head is a relational noun that presupposes a specific non-head.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85074560780&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1007/s11185-019-09214-w

DO - 10.1007/s11185-019-09214-w

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85074560780

VL - 43

SP - 181

EP - 204

JO - Russian Linguistics

JF - Russian Linguistics

SN - 0304-3487

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 51112989