2017, 6 |
Valerii M. Mokienko |
S. G. Shulezhkova, A. A. Osipova (eds.). Daite miru shans! Slovar’ sovremennykh politicheskikh lozungov Rossii i Germanii. Magnitogorsk: Magnitogorskii Dom pechati; Greifswald: Ernst-Moritz-Arndt-Universität, 2016. 300 p. ISBN 978-5-7114-0583-2. |
150-158 |
2017, 5 |
Natalia V. Serdobolskaya |
Asyndetic complement clauses with the Russian verb dumat’ ‘thinkʼ. |
7-35 |
2017, 5 |
Elena V. Uryson |
Adverbial prepositions as a subclass of adverbs |
36-55 |
2017, 5 |
Ekaterina N. Vinogradova |
Prepositions in Modern Russian: Lexicography and grammatical description. |
56-74 |
2017, 4 |
Pavel V. Grashchenkov |
How to break three prohibitions at a time: Some remarks on Russian verbs with sam-…-sja. |
25-32 |
2017, 4 |
Тatyana V. Krylova |
Woe from wit: Intellect in Russian linguistic world image. |
33-51 |
2017, 4 |
Elena E. Razlogova |
Standard and non-standard versions of translation. |
52-73 |
2017, 3 |
Olga Inkova |
Generalization: Definition, discourse functions, markers (in Russian, French, and Italian). |
53-82 |
2017, 3 |
Elena L. Vilinbakhova, Mikhail Kopotev |
Does “X est’ X” mean “X eto X”? Looking for an answer in synchrony and diachrony. |
110-124 |
2017, 3 |
Alexey A. Kozlov |
T. Nesset. How Russian came to be the way it is: A student’s guide to the history of the Russian language. Bloomington (IN): Slavica Publishers, 2015. xxvi, 361 p. ISBN 978-0-89357-443-7. |
125-132 |