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48  Articles
1 of 6 pages  |  10  records  |  more records»
The aim of the article is to give an overview of previous studies concerning Livonian prosody. In separate subsections a characterization of earlier treatments of the Livonian quantity and tone system will be provided. The Livonian prosodic system became ... see more

This article outlines the multiple use of electronic source materials from the Livonian-Estonian-Latvian Dictionary of 2012 in a “Kone Foundation” funded project for developing finite-state morphological parsers. It provides an introduction to the project... see more

Each less known addition to the collection of authentic Livonian language materials is very valuable, and a small contribution can also be made by Juris Plakis’ publication about Latvian, i.e., Courland toponyms, among which Livonian ones can be found as ... see more

The article considers written Livonian language sources located in the Estonian Cultural History Archives of the Estonian Literary Museum and which linguists can use in their studies. The most extensive collection of Livonian language sources – around 120... see more

The article deals with loanword strata in Livonian. The first part of the article compares loanword strata in Courland Livonian to those of Salaca Livonian with regard to source language (Middle Low German, Latvian, High German, and Russian) and parts of ... see more

In Livonian, obligation, duty, and necessity are expressed mainly by means of constructions containing a finite form of the auxiliary verbs pi?im ‘must’ and pi?iks ‘should have to’, tulda ‘to come’, la’dõ ‘to go’, v?lda ‘to be’ and lidõ ‘shall, will’. The... see more

Researchers of Finnic languages have stressed the special position of Livonian among its close relatives due to the great number of Latvian loan elements. The Latvian influence is noteworthy and present in all levels of the language. Baltic influence on L... see more

The article examines the relationship between the two prominent forms of Livonian: Salaca Livonian, spoken on the territory of historical Livonia, and Courland Livonian. Salaca Livonian is compared to the two main dialects of Courland Livonian – the easte... see more

The present article considers change-of-state predicates in Livonian and their possible development into future copulas. The focus is on the verbs iedõ ‘remain, stay; become’, sodõ ‘get; become’, and lidõ (synchronically a future copula), but also the ver... see more

1 of 6 pages  |  10  records  |  more records»