Search results for " LINGUISTICA"

showing 10 items of 951 documents

Introduzione

2018

Humanities linguistica letteratura filologia
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La parola dialettale nell’opera di Leonardo Sciascia: il caso di "taddema"

2020

Vine analizzata la parola "taddema", usata da Leonardo Sciascia nelle pagine conclusive de "Il giorno della Civetta". Ne viene ricostruita la storia e ne viene mostrato l'uso in sincronia e il suo rapporto con la voce italiana "diiadema".

Il giorno della civettaSettore L-FIL-LET/12 - Linguistica Italianadialetto e scrittura letterariaLeonardo Sciasciadialettismo regionalismo
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Imperative

2013

The entry deals with the various formations of the imperative mood in Ancient Greek.

Imperative moodCommands ProhibitionsSettore L-LIN/01 - Glottologia E Linguistica
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Towards a Reconstruction of Indo-European Culture: Semantic Functions of IE *men-

2003

The aim of this paper is to recover the semantic values involved in IE *men- in order to reconstruct some cognitive process modalities in regard to "Indo-European ideology" (Campanile 1992). After focusing on the apparent semantic split noticeable between Homeric Greek and Vedic in the uses derived from *men-, I argue for the presence of striking parallel paths using the methods of textual comparison. Then, the role of lexical nucleus' polysemy in originating the linguistic change is highlighted, without disregarding an Indo-European typological perspective within the realm of the so-called "basic lexicon" to which the root at issue belongs.

Indo-European culturepolysemyVedic Sanskrit.Homeric GreekSettore L-LIN/01 - Glottologia E Linguistica
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Some Reflections on the Gothic Optative

2015

The verbal systems of the earliest Indo-European languages are not so congruous with one another as the nominal paradigms. The reconstruction of IE is conformably fraught with far greater difficulty, and there is plenty of room for doubt. In this paper a particular morph will be dealt with, which does not go back as such to Indo-European. The proto-language must have possessed the linguistic unit employed in Gothic to form the verbal endings that are discussed here. Traces of this unit are found in other IE languages, as a matter of fact, and Gothic has utilized it in its own way. The issue will be discussed inside what is called the Greco-Aryan model. Indeed, based chiefly on Greek and San…

Indo-European Greco-Aryan model Germanic Gothic optative mood.Settore L-LIN/01 - Glottologia E Linguistica
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From Thinking to Raging: Reflexes of Indo-European *men- Polysemy in Homer

2020

This paper aims at investigating the semantic value of the verb μαίνομαι “to rage, to be furious” in Homeric Greek, in order to clarify the striking semantic relationship between the common ‘irrational’ meaning of the verb and the original ‘rational’ meaning of the Indo-European root *men- “to think”, to which the verb traces back. The corresponding words for μαίνομαι in other Indo-European languages (e.g. OInd. mányatē; Av. mainyeite; OIr. (do)moiniur; OCS mъnjo; Lit. miniu) can be translated as “to think”, thus showing an opposite meaning. From a textual analysis of all the occurrences of μαίνομαι in the Iliad and the Odyssey, the study aims at finding semantic traces of the original mean…

Indo-European Homeric Greek SemanticsRoot (linguistics)Original meaningIrrational numberVerbMeaning (existential)PolysemyValue (semiotics)Association (psychology)PsychologyLinguisticsSettore L-LIN/01 - Glottologia E Linguistica
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Homeric k-aorists and/or k-perfects?

2013

In classical Greek the aorist indicatives of dído:mi, je:mi, and títhe:mi end in -ka, -kas, -ke following a long vowel in the singular. Homeric Greek utilizes k-forms, both augmented and non-augmented, of these three verbs, and attests to third person plural forms ending in -kan and even to a first person plural form such as êne:kamen. There is a broad consensus regarding these forms as typical of Greek, while their relation to the k-perfect is still discussed. The paper considers the -k- to have a phonetic origin deriving from a laryngeal root,viz from *h1 or *h3, when they come into contact with *h2,the laryngeal of *-h2e, the ancient first person singular ending of the original perfect. …

Indo-EuropeanAncient Greek k-perfectSettore L-LIN/01 - Glottologia E Linguistica
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"Tea for two": the Archive of the Italian Latinity of the Middle Ages meets the CLARIN infrastructure

2020

This paper aims at showing how integrating the Archive of the Italian Latinity of the Middle Ages (ALIM) into the ILC4CLARIN repository can provide mutual benefits. Making ALIM available to a large community of scholars and researchers, on the one side, represents the first step to reduce the lack of resources for Medieval Latin in CLARIN and, on the other side, constitutes an unprecedented contribution to not only linguistic investigations, but also to the studies of the culture and science at the basis of the Western European society. The paper describes the adopted approach aiming to keep intact the structure of the archive and its metadata, which are both accurately mirrored into the IL…

Informatica umanistica filologia digitale letteratura medievale letteratura latina medievale letteratura latina TEIService (systems architecture)filologia digitaleHistorymedia_common.quotation_subjectSettore L-FIL-LET/15 - Filologia GermanicaDigital Archivesletteratura latina medievalecorpusResearch infrastructures Digital Archives CLARIN Language Resource SwitchboardSettore L-LIN/01 - Glottologia e LinguisticaSettore L-FIL-LET/05 - Filologia Classicaedizioni digitaliSettore L-FIL-LET/04 - Lingua E Letteratura LatinaWorld Wide WebCLARIN-ITrepositoryResource (project management)Medieval LatinReading (process)XML/TEILatin resourcesALIM CLARIN-IT Digital Librariesmedia_commonStructure (mathematical logic)SuiteALIM letteratura latina medievale edizioni critiche edizioni digitali XML/TEI filologia digitale metadataedizioni critichemetadataCLARIN Language Resource SwitchboardALIMDigital libraryMetadataCLARINResearch infrastructuresDigital LibrariesDigital Humanities Digital philology Medieval Literature Latin Medieval Latin Literature Latin Literature TEI
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Lingue e culture della montagna: le Madonie nell’esperienza dell’Atlante Linguistico della Sicilia (ALS)

2015

The cultural context of the Madonie — a hilly and mountainous territory near Palermo with about 60,000 inhabitants distributed in 22 little villages, some of which overlook the Tyrrhenian Sea — results from the influence of three external areas (those surrounding three of the most important towns in Sicily: Palermo, Caltanissetta, and Messina). The most relevant effect of such a complex multidirectional influence is the presence of three different micro-areas, each marked by different linguistic and cultural peculiarities. Since a situation of complex and “ordered” ethnolinguistic variability may be observed in the Madonie, the area and its micro-areas are currently investigated in a resear…

Interactive CartographySettore L-FIL-LET/12 - Linguistica ItalianaGeolinguisticLinguistic AtlaThe Madonie’s Food TraditionsCultural Heritage
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Ipocoristici italiani di nuovo conio

2021

this essay examines hypocoristica in Italian by drawing a comparison between one of the traditional models and an innovative one. In recent decades the latter has grown in importance and has thus become hegemonic in everyday language. the diachronic, historical, and sociolinguistic aspects of this innovation are discussed along with a functional and formal analysis and a number of related empirical and theoretical issues.

Italian Anthroponimy Hypocorism Linguistic change barytonesis Grammatical GenderSettore L-LIN/01 - Glottologia E Linguistica
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