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ISSN: 1736-8987    frecuency : 4   format : Electrónica

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Volume 9 Number 2 Year 2018

13 articles in this issue 

Tuuli Tuisk,Karl Pajusalu

This article presents a survey of Tiit-Rein Viitso’s studies on Livonian. Viitso has studied a variety of aspects of this southernmost Finnic language. In the current article, Viitso’s studies on Livonian are grouped into six parts: studies on (1) Livonia... see more

Pags. 13 - 34  

Aldur Vunk

In the 18th century, the Livonian language in Salaca Parish became the subject of academic interest, and also persecution. This article examines the contradictory challenges posed by the Age of Enlightenment, primarily the exclusion of the Livonian langua... see more

Pags. 35 - 59  

Renate Blumberga

Estonian researcher Ferdinand Linnus (1895–1942) was the first professional ethnologist to work with the Livonians. During three expeditions in 1927 and 1928, he spent seven months in the Livonian villages and recorded his observations and consultant acco... see more

Pags. 61 - 80  

Patrick O’Rourke

This article presents a study of Livonian social networks in the beginning of the 20th century during a time of language shift. In this study, I examine whether the Livonian communities were experiencing a language shift irrespective of the population dis... see more

Pags. 81 - 107  

Baiba Šuvcane,Valts Ernštreits

In 2018, the Livonian cultural space was added to the Latvian National List of Intangible Cultural Heritage, a step towards inclusion in the corresponding UNESCO list. This article seeks to document the present state of Livonian intangible cultural herita... see more

Pags. 109 - 128  

Ina Druviete,Gunta Klava

This article examines the role of Livonian in present-day Latvia and describes the Livonian language situation in the context of Latvia’s language situation and current sociolinguistic issues. It describes how Livonian language and culture are represented... see more

Pags. 129 - 146  

Rogier Blokland,Nobufumi Inaba

Courland Livonian is the only Finnic language where the habitive expressions of giving, taking, and having do not use the so-called l-cases, but instead the dative, the elative or a postposition. As the l-cases mostly only occur in a number of fossilised ... see more

Pags. 147 - 164  

Uldis Balodis

Livonian is unique among the Finnic languages in possessing a two-way tonal contrast in primary stressed syllables. Observed already in the earliest linguistic descriptions of Livonian, this two-way contrast between stressed syllables with stød (also call... see more

Pags. 165 - 187  

Tuuli Tuisk

The aim of the current article is to observe affricates in Livonian. Studies on the Finnic languages have described affricates in South Estonian, Veps, Votic, and Karelian, while Livonian affricates are poorly studied. The phonetic data used in this artic... see more

Pags. 189 - 214  

Miina Norvik,Helle Metslang,Karl Pajusalu

The supine inessive form in Salaca Livonian appears in a copular construction or as a sole predicate, and is usually associated with progressive and futurate readings. The linguistic data analysed in this study consist of example sentences in Salaca Livon... see more

Pags. 215 - 240  

Marili Tomingas

In Livonian and other Finnic languages, demonstratives are a widely used and important group of words, often showing distal oppositions and other referential differences. Demonstrative proadjectives are a type of demonstrative word that has not been much ... see more

Pags. 241 - 255  

Valts Ernštreits

Compounding is one of the most productive types of Livonian word formation. Compounds typically are synthetic and contain one or more modifiers, which follow the head of the compound. Most compound nouns have a singular genitive modifier. Livonian also ha... see more

Pags. 257 - 277