Academic literature on the topic 'Breton (langue) – Grammaire'

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Journal articles on the topic "Breton (langue) – Grammaire"

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Bergounioux, Gabriel. "Edouard Pichon et les patois." SHS Web of Conferences 46 (2018): 04003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/20184604003.

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Mobilis é comme médecin pendant la Première guerre mondiale, Edouard Pichon est resté en relation épistolaire avec son oncle et collaborateur pour l’Essai de grammaire de la langue française, Jacques Damourette. Dans une série de missives de l’année 1915, il lui fait part des études qu’il mène sur les dialectes et les langues régionales. A partir de listes de mots et de paradigmes de conjugaison, il cherche à retrouver dans les formes du picard, du franco-provençal, du catalan et du languedocien la preuve d’une permanence de la mentalité française à travers ses différents parlers. Mettant à co
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Carlyle, Karen A., and Ian Press. "A Grammar of Modern Breton." Language 64, no. 3 (1988): 643. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/414547.

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Manning, Paul. "Orderly affect." Pragmatics. Quarterly Publication of the International Pragmatics Association (IPrA) 12, no. 4 (2002): 415–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/prag.12.4.02man.

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This paper describes and analyzes a series of paradigmatic oppositions between N’ constructions in the P-Celtic languages (Welsh, Breton, Cornish) which serve to code expressive pragmatics of adjectives. The paper considers both paradigmatic and syntagmatic aspects of these constructions, and shows that asymmetric interaction of constructions in paradigms influences their purely formal syntagmatic interactions. A typology of expressive categories is built to serve as a framework for comparison between constructions. It is argued that a view of grammar that includes both formal and functional d
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Stephens, Janig. "Ian Press, A grammar of Modern Breton. (Mouton Grammar Library, 21.) Berlin, New York, Amsterdam: Mouton, 1986. Pp. xiii + 406." Journal of Linguistics 23, no. 1 (1987): 249–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022226700011233.

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WILLIS, DAVID. "Reconstructing last week's weather: Syntactic reconstruction and Brythonic free relatives." Journal of Linguistics 47, no. 2 (2010): 407–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022226710000381.

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Lightfoot (2002) argues that syntactic reconstruction is rendered impossible by the lack of any analogue in syntax to the traditional notion of the phonological ‘correspondence set’ of the Comparative Method and by the radical discontinuity caused by reanalysis between successive grammars. Alice Harris and Lyle Campbell, in various works, have defended the notion of ‘syntactic pattern’ as the analogue of the correspondence set, arguing that patterns can be compared across languages, with innovations being stripped away to reveal aspects of the protolanguage. In this article, I argue that synta
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Plank, Frans. "Greenlandic in comparison." Historiographia Linguistica 17, no. 3 (1990): 309–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/hl.17.3.04pla.

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Summary The first descriptive grammar of Greenlandic Eskimo was published in 1760 by Paul Egede, continuing the work of his father, Hans, and his missionary collaborator, Albert Top. Curiously, however, the comparative study of Greenlandic had already been inaugurated in 1745, when Marcus Wöldike (1699–1750), professor of theology at the University of Copenhagen, read a remarkable paper to the Kiøbenhavnske Selskab af Lœrdoms of Videnskabers Elskere, published next year in the proceedings of that Society. Based on information obtained from the Egedes, Wöldike presented a grammar of Greenlandic
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Pounder, Amanda V. "Adverb-marking in German and English." Diachronica 18, no. 2 (2001): 301–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/dia.18.2.05pou.

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Summary Beginning with the observations that strategies for adverb-marking are very different in English and German, and that the respective histories of adverb-marking in these two languages ran parallel for considerable time, this paper endeavours to establish the chronological and systemic points of their divergence. An additional focus of the paper is the role of language standardization in the development of the system in both languages. It is concluded that perhaps the most crucial systemic factor in the decline of lich-suffixation as an adverb-marker in German is the very broad function
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"Language learning." Language Teaching 36, no. 3 (2003): 202–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0261444803221959.

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03–438 Appel, Christine (Dublin City U., Ireland; Email: christine.appel@dcu.ie) and Mullen, Tony (U. of Groningen, The Netherlands). A new tool for teachers and researchers involved in e-mail tandem language learning. ReCALL (Cambridge, UK), 14, 2 (2002), 195–208.03–439 Atlan, Janet (IUT – Université Nancy 2, France; Email: janet.atlan@univ-nancy2.fr). La recherche sur les stratégies d'apprentissage appliquée à l'apprentissage des langues. [Learning strategies research applied to language learning.] Stratégies d'apprentissage (Toulouse, France), 12 (2003), 1–32.03–440 Aviezer, Ora (Oranim Tea
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Breton (langue) – Grammaire"

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Kersulec, Pierre-Yves. "Etude morphologique des noms en –erezh en breton moderne : morphologie et grammaire." Rennes 2, 2010. http://www.theses.fr/2010REN20060.

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Cette thèse propose un traitement morphologique des noms construits en –erezh en breton moderne, dans un cadre associativiste et constructionniste. Le travail proposé s’appuie sur des données écrites mais également sur des données orales inédites, recueillies dans plusieurs dialectes bretons. Une attention particulière est portée à certains parlers vannetais. L’objectif visé dans ce travail est de caractériser l’idiosyncrasie sémantico-syntaxique des noms construits en –erezh en breton moderne, en conjuguant quatre plans d’analyse : morphologie du procédé dérivationnel, sémantique, conditions
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Jouitteau, Mélanie. "La syntaxe comparée du breton." Phd thesis, Université de Nantes, 2005. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00010270.

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Cette thèse fournit une analyse détaillée d'une langue généralement peu étudiée, le breton (celtique continental contemporain). Son but est double: (i) - proposer une référence solide pour l'étude de la langue bretonne, ainsi que des langues celtiques et sémitiques. Je résume et évalue les différentes propositions qui ont été faites, et propose de nouvelles solutions, originales, efficaces et argumentées. (ii) - rendre accessible pour la communauté linguistique les réponses et nouvelles questions que le breton offre a certains enjeux théoriques cruciaux pour la grammaire générative et la typol
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Le, Harzic Katell. "Le français régional de la région de Morlaix, Basse-Bretagne : enracinement sociolinguistique et fonctionnements." Rennes 2, 2002. http://www.theses.fr/2002REN20035.

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Que représent l'expression 'accent breton', si souvent entendue en Basse-Bretagne? Le français et le breton, deux langues d'origine différente, avaient autrefois leurs limites exactes en Basse-Bretagne. Par nécessité historique, le français a progressivement envahi le breton. Au départ, cette pénétration s'est faite par une sorte d'endosmose insensible, le breton recevant sans s'en douter tout un flot de mots nouveaux, représentant des idées, des moeurs et des objets nouveaux. Au fil du temps, le français est devenu la langue commune que le breton, avec le morcellement de ses dialectes, n'a ja
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Books on the topic "Breton (langue) – Grammaire"

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Bayon, A. M. Le. Grammaire bretonne du dialecte de Vannes. Hor Yezh, 1986.

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Urien, Jean-Yves. La trame d'une langue: Le breton. Mouladurioù hor yezh, 1987.

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Brud, Nevez, ed. Grammaire bretonne. 4th ed. P. Trépos, B. Nevez, 1994.

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Everson, Michael. Breton grammar. 2nd ed. Evertype, 2007.

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Everson, Michael. Breton grammar. Everson Gunn Teoranta, 1995.

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Merser, A. Précis de grammaire bretonne. Ar Skol Vrezoneg, 1997.

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Abalain, Hervé. Histoire de la langue bretonne. 2nd ed. Gisserot, 2000.

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Abalain, Hervé. Histoire de la langue bretonne. Editions J.-P. Gisserot, 1995.

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Fleuriot, Léon. Le Vieux-Breton: Éléments d'une grammaire. Slatkine, 1989.

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Clerc, L. Le. Grammaire bretonne du dialecte de Tréguier. 3rd ed. Ar Skol Vrezoneg, 1986.

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Book chapters on the topic "Breton (langue) – Grammaire"

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Jouitteau, Mélanie. "Verb Second and the Left Edge Filling Trigger." In Rethinking Verb Second. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198844303.003.0019.

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This chapter is an inquiry into the subcomponent of the Extended Projection Principle (EPP) that is relevant for second position phenomena: the Left Edge Filling Trigger (LEFT). LEFT basically amounts to a classical morphological obligatory exponence effect, except that it is instantiated at the sentence level. It cross-linguistically operates in a post-syntactic realizational morphological module. It is shown that LEFT is an active rule of Universal Grammar, providing empirical arguments from Breton, a Celtic VSO language showing an extra conspicuous V2 requirement. A radical reanalysis of language word order typology is proposed. Classic V2 languages are conspicuously V2. SVO is a subtype. So-called V1 languages are either predicate-fronting languages (Tense second), or inconspicuously V2. A cross-linguistic typology of LEFT effects is presented, with great attention paid to inconspicuous satisfiers, among them null expletives, for which evidence is presented. The chapter argues accordingly for a drastic extension of the typology of expletives.
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