Pure Case and Prepositional Case in Russian

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Pure Case and Prepositional Case in Russian. / Lorentzen, Elena; Durst-Andersen, Per.

In: Russian Linguistics, Vol. 41, No. 2, 25.04.2017, p. 177-221.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Lorentzen, E & Durst-Andersen, P 2017, 'Pure Case and Prepositional Case in Russian', Russian Linguistics, vol. 41, no. 2, pp. 177-221. <http://rdcu.be/rA4P >

APA

Lorentzen, E., & Durst-Andersen, P. (2017). Pure Case and Prepositional Case in Russian. Russian Linguistics, 41(2), 177-221. http://rdcu.be/rA4P

Vancouver

Lorentzen E, Durst-Andersen P. Pure Case and Prepositional Case in Russian. Russian Linguistics. 2017 Apr 25;41(2):177-221.

Author

Lorentzen, Elena ; Durst-Andersen, Per. / Pure Case and Prepositional Case in Russian. In: Russian Linguistics. 2017 ; Vol. 41, No. 2. pp. 177-221.

Bibtex

@article{b71ed3d1d1fb45a798c4f67cf4692888,
title = "Pure Case and Prepositional Case in Russian",
abstract = "By considering Russian case as the nominal equivalent to mood whereby its semantic functions are emphasized at the expense of its syntactic functions, it is demonstrated that the nominative, accusative, vocative and genitive cases constitute a mini system in which the nominative and the accusative function as the indicative denoting local reference, the vocative as the imperative demanding local reference and the genitive as the subjunctive denoting non-local reference. At the same time, the genitive enters into another subsystemtogether with the dative and the instrumental in which they express three different viewpoints, which equally apply to the pure as well as the prepositional case systems.Within the prepositional case system, the accusative and the locative are treated by the notion of contact, while the genitive, dative and the instrumental are treated by the lack of contact—prepositional analogues to the notion of local reference and non-local reference. It is suggested that thenotion {\textquoteleft}contact{\textquoteright} has had a clear retroactive influence on the function of the accusative in the pure case system.",
author = "Elena Lorentzen and Per Durst-Andersen",
year = "2017",
month = apr,
day = "25",
language = "English",
volume = "41",
pages = "177--221",
journal = "Russian Linguistics",
issn = "0304-3487",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Pure Case and Prepositional Case in Russian

AU - Lorentzen, Elena

AU - Durst-Andersen, Per

PY - 2017/4/25

Y1 - 2017/4/25

N2 - By considering Russian case as the nominal equivalent to mood whereby its semantic functions are emphasized at the expense of its syntactic functions, it is demonstrated that the nominative, accusative, vocative and genitive cases constitute a mini system in which the nominative and the accusative function as the indicative denoting local reference, the vocative as the imperative demanding local reference and the genitive as the subjunctive denoting non-local reference. At the same time, the genitive enters into another subsystemtogether with the dative and the instrumental in which they express three different viewpoints, which equally apply to the pure as well as the prepositional case systems.Within the prepositional case system, the accusative and the locative are treated by the notion of contact, while the genitive, dative and the instrumental are treated by the lack of contact—prepositional analogues to the notion of local reference and non-local reference. It is suggested that thenotion ‘contact’ has had a clear retroactive influence on the function of the accusative in the pure case system.

AB - By considering Russian case as the nominal equivalent to mood whereby its semantic functions are emphasized at the expense of its syntactic functions, it is demonstrated that the nominative, accusative, vocative and genitive cases constitute a mini system in which the nominative and the accusative function as the indicative denoting local reference, the vocative as the imperative demanding local reference and the genitive as the subjunctive denoting non-local reference. At the same time, the genitive enters into another subsystemtogether with the dative and the instrumental in which they express three different viewpoints, which equally apply to the pure as well as the prepositional case systems.Within the prepositional case system, the accusative and the locative are treated by the notion of contact, while the genitive, dative and the instrumental are treated by the lack of contact—prepositional analogues to the notion of local reference and non-local reference. It is suggested that thenotion ‘contact’ has had a clear retroactive influence on the function of the accusative in the pure case system.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 41

SP - 177

EP - 221

JO - Russian Linguistics

JF - Russian Linguistics

SN - 0304-3487

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 170104858