2022, 6 |
Elena L. Berezovich, Irma I. Mullonen |
On semantic and etymological reconstruction of borrowed “cultural words”: Pomor Russian noun gurij ‘landmark sign made of stone’ |
21-43 |
2022, 6 |
Anatoly F. Zhuravlev |
Unproductive prefixes in East Slavic dialects (etymological heuristics; identification difficulties) |
44-61 |
2022, 1 |
Sergey V. Knyazev |
Sentence intonation in Russian dialects with word-by-word melodic contour |
7-39 |
2022, 1 |
Mate Kapović |
On the accent of Croatian kako ‘how’ and related words |
40-58 |
2021, 1 |
Andrey N. Sobolev |
[Review of:] N. Palliwoda, V. Sauer, S. Sauermilch (Hg.). Politische Grenzen — sprachliche Grenzen? Dialektgeographische und wahrnehmungsdialektologische Perspektiven im deutschsprachigen Raum. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 2019. 254 S. ISBN 978-3-11-056872-1. |
147-154 |
2020, 4 |
Anna V. Malysheva, Roman V. Ron’ko |
Russian object genitive of negation in modern dialect corpora and oral subcorpus of RNC |
25-54 |
2019, 6 |
Christiane Andersen |
Is contact-induced syncretism possible? A corpus-based study on bilingual verbal morphology of spoken German in Russian Siberia |
94-112 |
2019, 3 |
Anna Yu. Urmanchieva |
Narrative strategies as an evidence for language contact: Case study of Taz Selkup and Nganasan |
84-100 |
2018, 6 |
Nina G. Zaitseva, Irma I. Mullonen |
Development of the dialectal areas of Vepsian: “Vepsian Linguistic Atlas” |
85-103 |
2018, 3 |
Elena L. Berezovich, Olesia D. Surikova |
Reconstructing the lexicon of imprecations: The category of actor and peculiarities of its textual implementation (with special reference to Russian dialectal vocabulary). |
89-111 |