Kartvelian (South Caucasian) Linguistics

Kartvelian (South Caucasian) languages and linguistics

Network for linguists working or interested in Kartvelian (South Caucasian) Linguistics

Members

  • eleni sideri
  • Maria Sauna
  • Bernard R. Coulie
  • Soselia Ether
  • Ketevan Margiani
  • betül
  • Irine
  • akonai
  • mzekala
  • Tinatin Bolkvadze
  • Natia
  • Marine Ivanishvili
  • Gocha Kuchukhidze
  • Manana Topadze
  • nino rukhadze
  • Tariel Putkaradze

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Latest Activity

7 hours ago
7 hours ago
7 hours ago
Bernard R. Coulie is now a member of Kartvelian (South Caucasian) Linguistics
yesterday
on Sunday
on Sunday
on Sunday
ბატონო ბერტ. როგორ ბრძანდებით? ამას წინათ ბევრჯერ მოგწერეთ და არ გამომეხმაურეთ. ხომ მშვიდობაა თქვენსკენ? საუკეთესო სურვილებით თინათინ ბოლქვაძე
on Sunday

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Kartvelian (South Caucasian) Linguistics

Welcome to the network of Kartvelian (South Caucasian) Linguistics!

Please join the network and invite other interested people.

Members are welcome to organize their own web pages within this network and put a CV, a list of publications, research interests as well as links to their personal web pages.

Everybody is welcome to announce events of linguistic interest in the 'Events' section.

It is possible to create and organize thematic groups. Please join or create your own group depending on your research interests.

In the Forum one can share linguistic questions and knowledge.

Feel free to upload your photos and/or videos.

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Videos

Forum

David Rapava

resources on Kartvelian

Started by David Rapava in Linguistic issues Jan 7.

Nino Amiridze / ნინო ამირიძე

General Linguistics, Ling & Literature: 2 PhD Students, LMU München, Germany

Started by Nino Amiridze / ნინო ამირიძე in Scholarships, grants, stipends ... Nov. 18, 2009.

betül

MA/phD Thesis Abstracts-South Caucasian Languages 2 Replies

Started by betül in Sample Title. Last reply by betül Oct. 25, 2009.

Blog Posts

Rose Tyler

Anthropology Dissertation: in which areas/topics would you like to see more research done?

Hello All Dissertation Students,

I am in the process of finding out a topic for a anthropology dissertations , more specifically in forensic anthropology. Although I am quite sure what I want to do, I am interested in having views of others in the fields, and where they think research is lacking. With a bit of luck, my ideas will be amongst the areas suggested!

I am particularly interested in your… Continue

Posted by Rose Tyler on November 20, 2009 at 11:25am

Alexander Rostovtsev-Popiel

CV

CURRICULUM VITAE

PERSONAL
Full Name Alexander A. Rostovtsev-Popiel
Date of Birth 01.07.1984
Place of Birth Leningrad, USSR
Citizenship Russia
E-mail rostpopiel@gmail.com
Phone 0049-176-2497-1428

EDUCATION
2008–so far PhD Student, I.-W. Goethe Universität Frankfurt am Main. Doctoral Dissertation: Grammaticalized Affirmativity in Kartvelian; supervised by Prof. Dr. Jost Gippert
2006–2008 PhD Student, Department for General Linguistics, M. V. Lomonosov St. Petersburg State University; supervised… Continue

Posted by Alexander Rostovtsev-Popiel on July 27, 2009 at 2:22pm

Andrea Brunner

publications

Brunner, Andrea (to appear) Temporale Strukturen einer australischen Sprache: Tempus und Aspekt im Jaminjung. In: Grazer Linguistische Schriften/70. 29 Seiten.

Posted by Andrea Brunner on April 23, 2009 at 10:30am

Alexander Rostovtsev-Popiel

My doctoral thesis: abstract

EXPOSÉ
OF THE DOCTORAL DISSERTATION
GRAMMATICALIZED AFFIRMATIVITY IN KARTVELIAN
BY ALEXANDER ROSTOVTSEV-POPIEL

Every time we speak, language obliges us to choose a mode of the utterance – either appellative, or interrogative, or declarative. This pragmatic feature of human communication affects syntax and morphology of a language and thus determines the polarity of the sentence. Declarative sentences demonstrate two main types, namely affirmative and negative.

This dissertation addresses affir… Continue

Posted by Alexander Rostovtsev-Popiel on March 31, 2009 at 8:30pm — 5 Comments

Alexander Rostovtsev-Popiel

PREFIXATION IN NON-SPATIAL VERBS: GEO č’ama, MEGR č’k’omua, SVAN limäm ‘to eat’

This is part of my presentation in Tbilisi, Oct 2008


Georgian: 10

mi-: mi-a-č’ama ‘X ate Y in addition to Z’
mo-: mo-a-č’ama
mo-e-č’ama ‘X bit Y off Z’, cf. še=mo-e-č’ama
a=mo-: a=mo-s-č’ama ‘X ate Y picking it up (from Z)’
da-: da-s-č’ama ‘X nagged Y to death’
še-: še-č’ama ‘X ate Y’
še=mo-: še=mo-a-č’ama ‘X ate Y along/around the sides’
še=mo-e-č’ama ‘X ate Y by accident’
ča=mo-: ča=mo-a-č’ama ‘X ate Y from above’
ga=mo-: ga=mo-s-č’ama ‘X left Z without Y’
ga=mo-a-č’ama ‘X ate Y from… Continue

Posted by Alexander Rostovtsev-Popiel on March 31, 2009 at 8:30pm

The Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research. Most-Cited Full-Text Articles.

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