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Institute of Philology of
the Siberian Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences |
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Sibirskii Filologicheskii Zhurnal (Siberian Journal of Philology) | |
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Article
Authors: V. A. Gorbunova Institute of Philology of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Novosibirsk, Russian Federation In the section Linguistics
Abstract: The paper discusses the key features of noun derivation in the Ulch language, a topic that has not yet received full coverage in academic research. The study involves describing both derivation patterns and the affixes they employ. The latter occasionally reveal a complex semantic structure that allows them to feature in multiple patterns or cause different types of subtle shifts in the meaning of the core word. In total, over twenty-five patterns are listed and analyzed in the paper. Noun-to-noun and verb-to-noun patterns form the crux of the Ulch nominalization, with a limited number of adjective-to-noun and numeral-to-noun ones discovered as well, which, however, prove to be more semantically rigid and limited in use. In order to put the findings into a wider linguistic context, a comparative analysis is carried out, juxtaposing the Ulch noun derivation system against the Nanai and Orok ones. For each pat-tern described, the existing analogs from the two other languages are provided, and the differences in the distribution or the semantic transformation mechanisms are analyzed. Overall, the Ulch language appears to be similar to both Nanai and Orok ones when it comes to the range of nominal suffixes due to their deep-reaching historical connection. At the same time, significant divergence is observed in the appliance and mechanics of specific derivational patterns. One of the distinctive features of the Ulch nominalization is the trend towards using suffixes having been applied originally only to the core words belonging to one part of speech with stems from different categories. Keywords: noun derivation, derivational suffixes, Tungusic languages, Ulch language Bibliography: Avrorin V. A., Boldyrev B. V. Grammatika orochskogo yazyka [Grammar of the Orok language]. Novosibirsk, Publishing House SB RAS, 2001, 400 p. Avrorin V. A. Grammatika nanayskogo yazyka [Grammar of the Nanai language]. Leningrad, 1959, vol. 1, 282 p. Ozolinya L. V. Grammatika orokskogo yazyka [Grammar of the Orok language]. Novosi-birsk, Geo, 2013, 373 p. Petrova T. I. Ul’chskiy dialect nanayskogo yazyka [The Ulch dialect of the Nanai language]. Moscow, Leningrad, 1936, 156 p. Sravnitel’nyy slovar’ tunguso-man’chzhurskikh yazykov. Materialy k etimologicheskomu slovaryu [Comparative dictionary of Manchu-Tungus languages. Materials for the etymological dictionary]. V. I. Tsintsius (Ed.). Leningrad, Nauka, 1975, vol. 1, 672 p.; 1977, vol. 2, 992 p. Stoynova N. M. Glagoly “iskat’” i “nakhodit’” I ikh derivaty v dialektakh nanayskogo i ul’chskogo yazykov [Verbs “search” and “find” and their derivatives in the Nanai dialects and Ulch language]. In: EVRika! Sbornik statey o poiskakh i nakhodkakh k yubileyu E. V. Rakhilinoy [EUReka! A coll. of art. exploring the topic of searches and findings in celebration of E. V. Rakhilina’s anniv.]. Moscow, 2018, pp. 218–244. Sunik O. P. Ul’chskiy yazyk: issledovaniya I materialy [The Ulch language: studies and materials]. Leningrad, 1985, 262 p. Zaksor L. Zh., Naumova I. M. Neproduktivnye osnovoobrazuyushchie suffiksy v ul’chskikh sushchestvitel’nykh [Unproductive stem-forming suffixes in the Ulch nouns]. In: Sever, oleni i ne tol’ko… [The north, deer and more…]. St. Petersburg, Publishing House of Herzen State Peda-gogical University, 2014a, pp. 68–74. Zaksor L. Zh., Naumova I. M. Ob otdel’nykh slovoobrazovatel’nykh suffiksakh imen sushchestvitel’nykh v ul’chskom yazyke [On selected derivational nominal suffixes of the Ulch language]. In: Molodezh’ v innovatsionnom razvitii Arktiki. Sb. mat. kruglogo stola molodykh issledovateley Yakutii [The youth in innovative development of the Arctic. A coll. of materials from the open forum of young researchers of Yakutia]. St. Petersburg, VVM Publ., 2014, pp. 449–450. |
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