Home Linguistics & Semiotics 4. Standard Average European revisited in the light of Slavic evidence
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

4. Standard Average European revisited in the light of Slavic evidence

  • Jadranka Gvozdanović
Become an author with De Gruyter Brill
Slavic on the Language Map of Europe
This chapter is in the book Slavic on the Language Map of Europe
© 2019 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Munich/Boston

© 2019 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Munich/Boston

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Contents V
  3. Contributors VII
  4. Searching for a place of Slavic in Europe as a linguistic area 1
  5. Part I: Issues in Methodology and Pre-History
  6. 1. Matrёška and areal clusters involving varieties of Slavic. On methodology and data treatment 21
  7. 2. Common Slavic in the light of language contact and areal linguistics: Issues of methodology and the history of research 63
  8. 3. Intertwining trees, eddies, and tentacles — some thoughts on linguistic relationships in Europe, mainly Slavicnon- Slavic 87
  9. Part II: Slavic and Standard Average European
  10. 4. Standard Average European revisited in the light of Slavic evidence 113
  11. 5. The perfects of Eastern “Standard Average European”: Byzantine Greek, Old Church Slavonic, and the role of roofing 145
  12. 6. Slavic vis-à-vis Standard Average European: An areal-typological profiling on the morphosyntactic and phonological levels 187
  13. 7. How Yiddish can recover covert Asianisms in Slavic, and Asianisms and Slavisms in German (prolegomena to a typology of Asian linguistic influences in Europe) 225
  14. Part III: Slavic in Areal Groupings in Europe
  15. 8. Defining the Central European convergence area 261
  16. 9. Some morpho-syntactic features of the Slavic languages of the Danube Basin from a pan-European perspective 291
  17. 10. Slavic dialects in the Balkans: Unified and diverse, recipient and donor 315
  18. 11. Balkanisms and Carpathianisms or, Carpathian Balkanisms? 347
  19. 12. Morphosyntactic changes in Slavic micro-languages: The case of Molise Slavic in total language contact 385
  20. 13. On formulas of equivalence in grammaticalization: An example from Molise Slavic 433
  21. 14. Placing Kashubian on the language map of Europe 453
  22. Index of subjects 491
  23. Index of languages 495
Downloaded on 11.1.2026 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110639223-005/html
Scroll to top button