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- Title
Modern Greek V V dvandva compounds: A linguistic innovation in the history of the Indo-European languages<sup>1</sup>.
- Authors
Ralli, Angela
- Abstract
This paper deals with [V V] dvandva compounds, which are frequently used in East and Southeast Asian languages but also in Greek and its dialects: Greek is in this respect uncommon among Indo-European languages. It examines the appearance of this type of compounding in Greek by tracing its development in the late Medieval period, and detects a high rate of productivity in most Modern Greek dialects. It argues that the emergence of the [V V] dvandva pattern is not due to areal pressure or to a language-contact situation, but it is induced by a language internal change. It associates this change with the rise of productivity of compounding in general, and the expansion of verbal compounds in particular. It also suggests that the change contributes to making the compound-formation patterns of the language more uniform and systematic. Claims and proposals are illustrated with data from Standard Modern Greek and its dialects. It is shown that dialectal evidence is crucial for the study of the rise and productivity of [V V] dvandva compounds, since changes are not usually portrayed in the standard language.
- Subjects
COMPOUND words; GREEK language; INDO-European languages; LINGUISTICS; WORD formation (Grammar)
- Publication
Word Structure, 2009, Vol 2, Issue 1, p48
- ISSN
1750-1245
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.3366/E1750124509000294