1st Edition

American Studies in Uralic Linguistics

Edited By Felix J. Oinas, Fred W. Householder Copyright 1997
    388 Pages
    by Routledge

    First published in 1997. This is Volume I in the Uralic and Altaic Series. Up until the 1950s, Uralic and Altaic studies were virtually unknown in American academic circles. The somewhat arcane name of "Uralic and Altaic" conceals a field of study which, particularly in recent years, since the dissolution of the Soviet Union, is receiving considerable, well- Series Introduction xi deserved and overdue attention. Expressed in contemporary, political terms they focus on the following, today independent, states: Finland, Estonia, Hungary, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kirghizstan, and Mongolia. To these should be added some republics that are within the Russian Federation such as those of the Bashkir, Tatars, and Chuvash in Europe and of the Yakuts in the northeast of Siberia.

    Foreword; Two Nascent Affective Suffixes in Finnish? Stress and Juncture in Finnish; Morphophonemic Alternations in Eastern Cheremis; Segmental and Syllabic Quantity in Estonian; The Imperative in Hungarian; The So-Called Past Tenses in Cheremis; Concord in Balto-Finnic and Preposition Repetition in Russian; On Some Altaic Loanwords in Hungarian; The Equivalents of English" Than" in Finno-Ugric; An East Cheremis Phonology; Eighteenth Century Cheremis: The Evidence from Pallas; Phoneme Subsystems and Correspondences in Cheremis Dialects

    Biography

    Edited by the Indiana University Committee on Uralic Studies. Thomas A. Sebeok, Editor  Fred W. Householder, Jr., Felix J. Oinas, and Alo Raun, Associate Editors  John Lotz (Columbia University), Samuel E. Martin (Yale University), Nicholas N.  Poppe (University of Washington), and Lewis V. Thomas (Princeton University),  Consulting Editors.