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دسته بندی: زبانشناسی ویرایش: نویسندگان: Ruth A. Berman سری: Studies in Language Companion Series ISBN (شابک) : 9027204195, 9789027204196 ناشر: John Benjamins Publishing Company سال نشر: 2019 تعداد صفحات: 702 زبان: English فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) حجم فایل: 7 مگابایت
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب Usage-Based Studies in Modern Hebrew: Background, Morpho-lexicon, and Syntax به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب مطالعات مبتنی بر کاربرد در عبری مدرن: پسزمینه، واژگان واژگان و نحو نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
هدف این جلد این است که نور تازهای بر زبان عبری مدرن از دیدگاههایی با هدف خوانندگان علاقهمند به حوزههای زبانشناسی عمومی، گونهشناسی و مطالعات سامی روشن کند. با شروع فصلهایی که اطلاعات پسزمینهای در مورد تکامل و محیط اجتماعی-زبانی زبان ارائه میکنند، بخش عمدهای از کتاب به مطالعات مبتنی بر استفاده از صرفشناسی، واژگان، و نحو عبری کنونی اختصاص دارد. اساساً بر اساس تحلیلهای اصلی مواد گفتاری و آنلاین معتبر، این مطالعات چارچوبهای مرجع نظری مختلفی را منعکس میکنند که تا حد زیادی از نظر رویکرد مدل خنثی هستند. برای این منظور، کتاب به جای ارائه توصیفات ساختارگرایانه یا رسمی از سیستم های زبانی خاص، رویکردی با انگیزه عملکردی و پویا به استفاده واقعی ارائه می دهد. چنین دیدگاهی به ویژه در مورد زبانی که تحت فرآیندهای تغییر شتابان قرار می گیرد، که در آن شکاف بین دستورات تجویزی تأسیس زبان عبری و استفاده واقعی از گویندگان و نویسندگان تحصیل کرده، باسواد اما غیرمتخصص به زبان عبری فعلی به طور مداوم اهمیت دارد. در حال افزایش است.
The goal of the volume is to shed fresh light on Modern Hebrew from perspectives aimed at readers interested in the domains of general linguistics, typology, and Semitic studies. Starting with chapters that provide background information on the evolution and sociolinguistic setting of the language, the bulk of the book is devoted to usage-based studies of the morphology, lexicon, and syntax of current Hebrew. Based primarily on original analyses of authentic spoken and online materials, these studies reflect varied theoretical frames-of-reference that are largely model-neutral in approach. To this end, the book presents a functionally motivated, dynamic approach to actual usage, rather than providing strictly structuralist or formal characterizations of particular linguistic systems. Such a perspective is particularly important in the case of a language undergoing accelerated processes of change, in which the gap between prescriptive dictates of the Hebrew Language Establishment and the actual usage of educated, literate but non-expert speaker-writers of current Hebrew is constantly on the rise.
Usage-Based Studies in Modern Hebrew Editorial page Title page Copyright page Table of contents List of authors Acknowledgements Transcription, transliteration, Hebrew-specific coding A. Orthographic elements B. Broad phonemic transcription of spoken Hebrew C. Hebrew-specific glossing and coding conventions References Introduction Chapter summaries Part I. Background Part II. Morphology-lexicon Part III. Syntax References Part I. General background Chapter 1. Setting Modern Hebrew in space, time, and culture 1. Introduction 1.1 The speech community 2. Genetic affiliation and nomenclature 3. Linguistic research: From prescriptivism to descriptivism References Chapter 2. Historical overview of Modern Hebrew 1. Timeline 2. The impact of the classical strata of Hebrew 3. The modernization of Hebrew References Chapter 3. Genetic affiliation 1. The Semitic family 2. Hebrew morphology as Semitic 2.1 The consonantal root system 2.2 Pronominal system 2.3 Nominal system 2.4 Verbal derivation (verbal stems) 2.5 Verbal inflection 3. Lexicon 4. The controversial status of Modern Hebrew References Chapter 4. Sociolinguistics of Modern Hebrew 1. The multilingual setting of Modern Hebrew 1.1 Languages of Ashkenazi Jews 1.2 Languages of Sephardi Jews 1.3 Languages of Mizraḥi Jews 1.4 Russian, Ethiopian, global languages, and transnationalism 1.5 Impact of foreign languages on Modern Hebrew 1.6 Interaction with Palestinian Arabic 2. Communal varieties of Modern Hebrew 2.1 Two major dialect types 2.2 Intersecting varieties of Modern Hebrew 3. Registers, genres, codes and styles 3.1 Register scale 3.2 Spoken language in literature 3.3 Performing arts (theater, film, drama) 3.4 Song and music 3.5 Mass communication and media 3.6 Digital language 3.7 Hybrid bilingual codes 4. Language, gender, and power 4.1 Gender bias and countermeasures 4.2 Gendered symbols and stereotypes 4.3 Male as norm? 5. Language ideology and educational policies 6. Linguistic landscape 7. Concluding comment References Chapter 5. Prescriptive activity in Modern Hebrew 1. Introduction 1.1 Prescription, norms, and standards 1.2 Prescriptive discourse 1.3 Prescriptivism, ideology, and nationality 1.4 Attitudes towards prescriptivism 2. Prescriptive activity in Modern Hebrew 2.1 The pre-state period (1889–1948) 2.2 Prescriptivism in Israel since 1948 3. Some illustrations 3.1 Pronunciation 3.2 Grammatical structure 3.3 Lexicon 4. Concluding notes References Chapter 6. Notes on Modern Hebrew phonology and orthography 1. Introduction 2. The phoneme inventory of Modern Hebrew 2.1 Consonants 2.2 Vowels 3. Some diachronic processes leading to current sound patterns 4. Phonotactics 5. Stress 6. Notes on Hebrew orthography References Part II. Morpho-lexicon Chapter 7. Inflection 1. Introduction 2. Pronouns 2.1 Independent, free pronouns 2.2 Dependent pronouns 3. Verb inflection 3.1 Root and templates 3.2 Tense inflection 3.3 Mood inflection 3.4 Infinitives, gerunds, and action nominals 3.5 Agreement marking for person, gender and number inflection 4. Nouns 4.1 Gender inflection: Masculine and feminine 4.2 Number inflection 4.3 Construct state inflection 5. Adjectives 5.1 Gender inflection in adjectives 5.2 Number inflection 6. Concluding remarks References Chapter 8. Derivation 1. Introduction 2. Structural classes of Hebrew derivational morphology 2.1 Root and pattern interdigited (non-linear) affixation 2.2 Stem plus suffix linear affixation 2.3 Zero-derivation 2.4 Reduplication 3. Derivational morphology in verbs 3.1 Structure and use of binyan patterns 3.2 Derivational verb families 3.3 New-verb derivation 4. Derivational morphology in nouns 4.1 Ontological categories 4.2 Morphophonological facets of noun derivation 5. Derivational morphology in adjectives 5.1 Linear formation: Denominal adjectives 5.2 Non-linear adjective formation 5.2.3 Non-productive adjectival structures 6. Adverbial constructions 7. Concluding notes References Appendix A. List of sources Chapter 9. Parts of speech categories in the lexicon of Modern Hebrew 1. Introduction 1.1 What’s “a word” in Hebrew? 1.2 Old versus new words 1.3 Conventional dictionaries and the mental lexicon 1.4 Role of morphology in the Hebrew lexicon 1.5 Sources of data 1.6 Quantitative breakdowns of parts-of-speech 2. Types of lexical categories 2.1 Open class content words 2.2 Closed class grammatical functors 2.3 Intermediate elements 3. Productivity and innovation in the MH lexicon References Chapter 11. Nominalizations 1. Introduction 1.1 Other verb-related nouns 1.2 Data-base Three “verbal noun” constructions in MH 1.3 Criteria of nominalness 1.4 Properties of ‘verbal nouns’ in MH 2. Derived action nominals [vnom] 2.1 Morpho-phonological properties of action nominals 2.2 Lexico-semantic properties of vnoms 2.3 Syntactic properties 2.4 Distribution of vnom constructions in MH 3. Gerunds 4. Infinitives 5. Comparing the structure and use of three verbal nouns in MH 6. Concluding notes References Part III. Syntax Chapter 12. Agreement alternations in Modern Hebrew 1. Introduction 2. Feminine–masculine alternations 2.1 Plural marking 2.2 Dual–plural marking 2.3 Numerals and gender agreement 2.4 Plurals and gender agreement 2.5 Gender agreement: Summary 3. Personal–impersonal alternations 3.1 Verb-initial clauses 3.2 The existential yeš 3.3 The question-word / quantifier eyze 3.4 Personal-impersonal agreement: Summary 4. Form/meaning alternations 4.1 Place names 4.2 Names of firms 4.3 Agreement variations with the noun be’alim ‘owner(s)’ 4.4 Summary 5. Controller alternations 5.1 Construct state NPs 5.2 The copular construction 5.3 Summary 6. Conclusions References Chapter 14. Genitive (smixut) constructions in Modern Hebrew 1. Introduction 1.1 Constructions analyzed 1.2 Sources of data 2. Binominal N^ N(P) smixut genitive constructions 2.1 Bound N^ N(P) constructions 2.2 Free analytical genitives 2.3 Double-marked complex genitives 2.4 Alternation between genitive constructions 3. Other binominal constructions 3.1 Construct-state adjective + noun [ac] 3.2 Head noun + denominal adjective (daj) 4. Concluding discussion References Chapter 16. Negation in Modern Hebrew 1. Introduction 2. Data and methodology 3. Quantitative results 4. Wide-scope negation 4.1 The negator ‘lo’ 4.2 The negator ‘al’ 4.3 The negator ‘en’ 5. Narrow-scope negation 5.1 Contrastive negation 5.2 Preposing 6. Negative indefinites 7. Negation and prosody 8. Negation-based discourse markers 9. Non-linguistic negation 10. Concluding comments References Chapter 17. List constructions 1. Introduction 2. Sentence level vs. discourse level 3. Number of listees 4. Cognitive processes, coherence relations, and discourse functions 5. Semantic relations and discourse functions 6. Lists and discourse structure 7. Prosody 8. List interpreters 9. Conclusion Acknowledgements References Chapter 18. A usage-based typology of Modern Hebrew syntax: How Semitic? 1. Introduction 2. Bi-clausal constructions: Clauses and their combination 2.1 Inter-clausal relations in modern Hebrew 2.2 Inter-clausal relations: Examples from biblical Hebrew prose 3. Concluding comments References Index