Replication data for: V-temporal adverbials in Slavic

DOI

The database includes 271 Russian examples and their equivalents in Ukrainian, Belarusian, Polish and Czech. The data were culled from the ParaSol parallel corpus (see http://parasol.unibe.ch/).

Publication abstract: This article presents a corpus-based investigation of temporal adverbials with special focus on Russian v ‘in(to)’ and its cognates in North Slavic (Belarusian, Ukrainian, Polish and Czech). We advance the Constraint Hypothesis, according to which case government is more restricted in the domain of time than in the domain of space. This hypothesis receives support from the five languages under scrutiny insofar as the distribution of the accusative vs. locative after v and its cognates is contrastive in the domain of space, but complementary in temporal adverbials. On this basis, we argue that the relationship between space and time is asymmetrical. Although all five languages display space-time asymmetries, we show that they have different systems of temporal adverbials, including a number of constructions with prepositions or bare cases. In order to capture the differences we propose a North Slavic Temporal Adverbial Continuum, which is corroborated by a thorough statistical investigation of data from the ParaSol corpus.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.18710/IOCDRU
Related Identifier IsCitedBy https://doi.org/10.1007/s11185-013-9115-9
Metadata Access https://dataverse.no/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_datacite&identifier=doi:10.18710/IOCDRU
Provenance
Creator Makarova, Anastasia ORCID logo; Nesset, Tore ORCID logo
Publisher DataverseNO
Contributor Makarova, Anastasia; UiT The Arctic University of Norway; The Tromsø Repository of Language and Linguistics (TROLLing)
Publication Year 2014
Rights CC0 1.0; info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess; http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0
OpenAccess true
Contact Makarova, Anastasia (UiT The Arctic University of Norway)
Representation
Resource Type corpus; Dataset
Format application/octet-stream; text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
Size 291403; 62993; 2998
Version 2.3
Discipline Humanities