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Aspetti morfosintattici e sociolinguistici dell'influenza dell'inglese sulla lingua russa

Abstract

pp.63-73This article discusses the changes in Russian word formation under the influence of English grammar, especially the compound formation rules. A useful feature of the English language is that a noun can be used as an adjective, providing information about another noun. Compounds are simply elements strung together without any markers, characterized by attributive or appositional relationships betweeen the head and the modifier. In English, the head of a compound is the last word, and compound nouns that consist of more than two words can be constructed recursively by combining two words at a time. It is also possible to have syntactic compounds, embedded constructions and hyphenated compounds. Russian shows a great flexibility in phonetically and morphologically adapting not only single words (loans and calques), but also compound formation patterns borrowed from English, particularly the modifier/head principle. Moreover, the process of borrowing may give rise to phenomena such as semantic extension and semantic duplication. Finally, examples will be given of how the influence of English is linked to the sociolinguistic notion of prestige and “discourse attuning”

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