Trends in Linguistics. Studies and Monographs [TiLSM] ;
v. 313
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Intro; Acknowledgments; Table of contents; Introduction; 1 The alleged Persian-Germanic connection: A remarkable chapter in the study of Persian from the sixteenth through the nineteenth centuries1; 2 Huihuiguan zazi: A New Persian glossary compiled in Ming China; 3 Glimpses of Balochi lexicography: Some iconyms for the landscape and their motivation; 4 On some Iranian secret vocabularies, as evidenced by a fourteenth-century Persian manuscript; 5 Specialization of an ancient object marker in the New Persian of the fifteenth century1.
15 Possessive construction in Kurdish16 To bring the distant near: On deixis in Iranian oral literature; 17 Extracting semantic similarity from Persian texts; List of contributors; Index.
6 Fillers, emphasizers, and other adjuncts in spoken Dari and Pashto7 The historically unmotivated majhul vowel as a significant areal dialectological feature; 8 Variability in Persian forms of address as represented in the works of Iranian playwrights; 9 Some linguistic indicators of sociocultural formality in Persian; 10 Spoken vs. written Persian: Is Persian diglossic?; 11 Accounting for *yek ta in Persian; 12 The associative plural and related constructions in Persian; 13 Revisiting the status of -eÅ¡ in Persian1; 14 â#x80;#x98;Difficultâ#x80;#x99; and â#x80;#x98;easyâ#x80;#x99; in Ossetic.
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The series publishes state-of-the-art work on core areas of linguistics across theoretical frameworks as well as studies that provide new insights by building bridges to neighbouring fields such as neuroscience and cognitive science. The series considers itself a forum for cutting-edge research based on solid empirical data on language in its various manifestations, including sign languages. It regards linguistic variation in its synchronic and diachronic dimensions as well as in its social contexts as important sources of insight for a better understanding of the design of linguistic systems.