Adopting a usage-based constructional approach with a functional-cognitive orientation, this study examines the mechanisms that regulate the interaction between intensification and identification of the referent in different types of copular sentences (namely, categorizing, equative, similative, attributive and specificational) in the Russian language. In particular, the intensifying use of the phasal adverb uže ‘already’ in copular sentences of the type [x (cop) uže y] is discussed. In the second part of the study, a contrastive approach is adopted to highlight, through a comparison with Italian, the process of semantic extension, the presuppositions, and the conventional implicatures that allow an adverb of time to operate in the domain o...
Russian and Spanish each have two variants of the predicational copular sentence. In Russian, the va...
This study offers a corpus-based classification of some frequent Italian intensifying metaphors of t...
This paper examines the hypothesis that, in the languages which developed articles and in those whic...
Adopting a usage-based constructional approach with a functional-cognitive orientation, this study e...
From maximizer to discourse marker: the status of assolutamente in Italian and its functional equiva...
The present study focuses on the intensifying-evaluative reading of the Russian epistemic indefinite...
The article presents a study of the syntactic and semantic compatibility of the approximative adverb...
The Verbs naest’sja, napit’sja and doždat’sja and their Italian Equivalents in the Russian-Italian P...
The aim of this paper is to verify if the referential ambiguity induced by intensional verbs (chotet...
The Russian sentence (1), from Padučeva and Uspensky (1979), and English (2) are examples of specifi...
Italian hyperbolic intensifiers and their translation into Russian This paper proposes a comprehensi...
In the article the most productive intensifying words commonly used in Russian colloquial speech are...
This paper examines the hypothesis that, in the languages which developed articles and ...
This paper presents a study of Russian converb constructions (non-finite verb forms used for adverbi...
This paper examines some morphological means for expressing intensification in Russian and Bulgaria...
Russian and Spanish each have two variants of the predicational copular sentence. In Russian, the va...
This study offers a corpus-based classification of some frequent Italian intensifying metaphors of t...
This paper examines the hypothesis that, in the languages which developed articles and in those whic...
Adopting a usage-based constructional approach with a functional-cognitive orientation, this study e...
From maximizer to discourse marker: the status of assolutamente in Italian and its functional equiva...
The present study focuses on the intensifying-evaluative reading of the Russian epistemic indefinite...
The article presents a study of the syntactic and semantic compatibility of the approximative adverb...
The Verbs naest’sja, napit’sja and doždat’sja and their Italian Equivalents in the Russian-Italian P...
The aim of this paper is to verify if the referential ambiguity induced by intensional verbs (chotet...
The Russian sentence (1), from Padučeva and Uspensky (1979), and English (2) are examples of specifi...
Italian hyperbolic intensifiers and their translation into Russian This paper proposes a comprehensi...
In the article the most productive intensifying words commonly used in Russian colloquial speech are...
This paper examines the hypothesis that, in the languages which developed articles and ...
This paper presents a study of Russian converb constructions (non-finite verb forms used for adverbi...
This paper examines some morphological means for expressing intensification in Russian and Bulgaria...
Russian and Spanish each have two variants of the predicational copular sentence. In Russian, the va...
This study offers a corpus-based classification of some frequent Italian intensifying metaphors of t...
This paper examines the hypothesis that, in the languages which developed articles and in those whic...