HABITUAL AND CONTINUOUS ASPECTS IN SAKHA

The article is dedicated to the analysis of the habitual and continuous aspects in Sakha (Yakut) language. This study mainly focuses on Sakha, a Turkic language spoken by approximately 360000 speakers in Siberia, Russia. Although genetically Sakha is a Turkic language, it is very different from othe...

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Main Author: DELANNOIS, M.S.
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Published: Международный журнал гуманитарных и естественных наук 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.24411/2500-1000-2020-11385
http://cyberdoi.ru/doi/10.24411/2500-1000-2020-11385
id ftdatacite:10.24411/2500-1000-2020-11385
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdatacite:10.24411/2500-1000-2020-11385 2023-05-15T18:08:21+02:00 HABITUAL AND CONTINUOUS ASPECTS IN SAKHA DELANNOIS, M.S. 2020 https://dx.doi.org/10.24411/2500-1000-2020-11385 http://cyberdoi.ru/doi/10.24411/2500-1000-2020-11385 unknown Международный журнал гуманитарных и естественных наук ХАБИТУАЛЬНЫЙ ДЛИТЕЛЬНЫЙ АСПЕКТ ИТЕРАТИВНОСТЬ НЕСОВЕРШЕННЫЙ HABITUAL CONTINUOUS ASPECT ITERATIVITY IMPERFECTIVE Paper Text article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2020 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.24411/2500-1000-2020-11385 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z The article is dedicated to the analysis of the habitual and continuous aspects in Sakha (Yakut) language. This study mainly focuses on Sakha, a Turkic language spoken by approximately 360000 speakers in Siberia, Russia. Although genetically Sakha is a Turkic language, it is very different from other Turkic languages due to contact with its neighbouring languages, which are from families such as Mongolic, Tungusic, and Slavic. The aspectual system of Sakha differs from English and other inflectional languages because Sakha is an agglutinating language whereas English or Russian are synthetic. The aspectual system in Sakha is expressed through verbal endings, converbs or other verbal morphology. In this article I discuss two types of aspect: Habitual and Continuous. This study investigates the ways of formation (synthetic and analytical) of different verbal aspects in Sakha, i.e. which way is used to express each aspect. The system I use in this article is based on Comrie’s classification into two main aspects. The category of aspect is hardly found in most studies on Turkic morphology. It is hoped that by focusing on the formation of verbal aspects in Sakha, this article can offer insights into the aspectual system of the Sakha language. Report Sakha Sakha Sakha language Yakut Yakut Siberia DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Sakha
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic ХАБИТУАЛЬНЫЙ
ДЛИТЕЛЬНЫЙ
АСПЕКТ
ИТЕРАТИВНОСТЬ
НЕСОВЕРШЕННЫЙ
HABITUAL
CONTINUOUS
ASPECT
ITERATIVITY
IMPERFECTIVE
spellingShingle ХАБИТУАЛЬНЫЙ
ДЛИТЕЛЬНЫЙ
АСПЕКТ
ИТЕРАТИВНОСТЬ
НЕСОВЕРШЕННЫЙ
HABITUAL
CONTINUOUS
ASPECT
ITERATIVITY
IMPERFECTIVE
DELANNOIS, M.S.
HABITUAL AND CONTINUOUS ASPECTS IN SAKHA
topic_facet ХАБИТУАЛЬНЫЙ
ДЛИТЕЛЬНЫЙ
АСПЕКТ
ИТЕРАТИВНОСТЬ
НЕСОВЕРШЕННЫЙ
HABITUAL
CONTINUOUS
ASPECT
ITERATIVITY
IMPERFECTIVE
description The article is dedicated to the analysis of the habitual and continuous aspects in Sakha (Yakut) language. This study mainly focuses on Sakha, a Turkic language spoken by approximately 360000 speakers in Siberia, Russia. Although genetically Sakha is a Turkic language, it is very different from other Turkic languages due to contact with its neighbouring languages, which are from families such as Mongolic, Tungusic, and Slavic. The aspectual system of Sakha differs from English and other inflectional languages because Sakha is an agglutinating language whereas English or Russian are synthetic. The aspectual system in Sakha is expressed through verbal endings, converbs or other verbal morphology. In this article I discuss two types of aspect: Habitual and Continuous. This study investigates the ways of formation (synthetic and analytical) of different verbal aspects in Sakha, i.e. which way is used to express each aspect. The system I use in this article is based on Comrie’s classification into two main aspects. The category of aspect is hardly found in most studies on Turkic morphology. It is hoped that by focusing on the formation of verbal aspects in Sakha, this article can offer insights into the aspectual system of the Sakha language.
format Report
author DELANNOIS, M.S.
author_facet DELANNOIS, M.S.
author_sort DELANNOIS, M.S.
title HABITUAL AND CONTINUOUS ASPECTS IN SAKHA
title_short HABITUAL AND CONTINUOUS ASPECTS IN SAKHA
title_full HABITUAL AND CONTINUOUS ASPECTS IN SAKHA
title_fullStr HABITUAL AND CONTINUOUS ASPECTS IN SAKHA
title_full_unstemmed HABITUAL AND CONTINUOUS ASPECTS IN SAKHA
title_sort habitual and continuous aspects in sakha
publisher Международный журнал гуманитарных и естественных наук
publishDate 2020
url https://dx.doi.org/10.24411/2500-1000-2020-11385
http://cyberdoi.ru/doi/10.24411/2500-1000-2020-11385
geographic Sakha
geographic_facet Sakha
genre Sakha
Sakha
Sakha language
Yakut
Yakut
Siberia
genre_facet Sakha
Sakha
Sakha language
Yakut
Yakut
Siberia
op_doi https://doi.org/10.24411/2500-1000-2020-11385
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