Igor A. Meľčuk
Pronominal expressions with “diabolical” nouns of the type [Ona uexala] čert znaet kuda ‘She went devil knows where’ in Russian |
5 - 22 |
Elena N. Nikitina
Returning to gerunds in non-specific third-plural subjects |
23 - 41 |
Nina R. Dobrushina
Infinitive constructions with the particle by |
42 - 64 |
Ekaterina A. Lyutikova
Two types of inversion in Russian noun phrases |
65 - 106 |
E. Fortuin, A. Israeli
Modal particles and aspectuality: znaj and sebe in Russian |
107 - 131 |
E. A. Savina
Supportive constructions as a part of the communicative level of language |
132 - 139 |
B. H. Partee, V. Borschev
Dva stakana moloka: Substances and Containers in Genitive of Measure Constructions in Russian |
140 - 166 |
Anna S. Kuleva
Short-form adjectives and participles through the prism of an author's dictionary (working on the Dictionary of the Russian Poetic Language of XXth c.) |
167 - 185 |
D. E. Collins
The Strength of the Case: Interpreting the Hapax Legomenon доужебоу in Novgorod Birchbark 855 |
186 - 218 |
Ekaterina A. Mishina
“Situation of futile expectation” and negation |
219 - 241 |
Anna V. Sakharova
Parameters of meaning governing the use of short participles in the Russian chronicle for some causative verbs |
242 - 256 |
Dmitri V. Sitchinava
The particles bylo and byvalo in the eighteenth-century Russian |
257 - 284 |
Dmitry V. Rudnev
Pseudo-copulas in the Russian of the XVIIth century |
285 - 301 |