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General

Institute Of Estonian And General Linguistics

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Our Institute is one of the foremost centres of linguistic research in Estonia. The research conducted in the Institute focuses mainly on Estonian, but also tackles other Finno-Ugric languages, such as Izhorian, Votic, Komi, and other languages. Estonian is a morphologically rich Finno-Ugric language with nominal paradigms that have at least 28 different inflected forms but sometimes more than 40.

CERN task force explores Estonia’s scientific excellence and ...

Recent work in usage-based linguistics stresses the importance of combining corpus-based analyses development of with experimental studies. A number of studies have compared the performance of a corpus-based

MEDAL Summer School in Experimental Linguistics

Heinike HEINSOO | Cited by 13 | of University of Tartu, Tartu | Read 11 publications | Contact Heinike HEINSOO

This paper examines linguistic politeness among Estonians and Russians in Estonia. The Estonian verb saama ’get; become’, together with different nonfinite verb forms, is used to form impersonal, passive, resultative, modal, and future constructions.

The Estonian des- and mata-constructions operate as free modifiers of event constructions, thus qualifying for the typological definition of a converb construction. University of Tartu Institute of Estonian and General Linguistics Position PhD Student Education

The paper gives a general overview of the development of computational semantics in Estonia beginning from the second half of the 20th century. Main focus concentrates on the work we have done so About The MEDAL Summer School in Corpus Linguistics will be held from 19-23 June 2023 at the Institute of Estonian and General Linguistics at the University of Tartu, Estonia. The summer school aims to expose post-graduate students and early career researchers to top-notch research and teaching concerning modern, cutting-edge methodology in corpus 14. rahvusvaheline fennougristika kongress Congressus Internationalis Fenno-Ugristarum (CIFU) on suurim rahvusvaheline soome-ugri (Uurali) keelte, kultuuride, kirjanduse, folkloori, kunsti, muusika, rahvausundi, ajaloo, geneetika ja arheoloogia uurimisele pühendatud teadusüritus. Alates 1960. aastast on kongressi korraldatud iga viie aasta tagant. 14. rahvusvaheline

University of Tartu Institute of Estonian and General Linguistics Tartu, Estonia Position Researcher Education Institute of Estonian and General LinguisticsJakobi 2, IV korrus 51005 Tartu linn, Tartu linn, Tartumaa EST

The Estonian verb saama ’get; become’, together with different nonfinite verb forms, is used to form impersonal, passive, resultative, modal, and future constructions. The topic of the study Head of Institute PhD (Estonian Language) +372 513 8446 (8446) Jakobi 2-443 [email protected] Eva Liina Asu-Garcia Deputy Head of Academic Affairs PhD (Phonetics) [email protected] CV in Estonian Research Information System Virve-Anneli Vihman Deputy Head of Development PhD (Linguistics) +372 5349 6820 Jakobi 2-416 [email protected] Tiia Margus

University of Tartu Institute of Estonian and General Linguistics

This article analyses the production and comprehension of Estonian impersonal and passive constructions by Estonian children. This is the first attempt to describe the language of landscape in Estonian. We used list task questions and semi-structured interviews as combined methods. 124 participants took

Külli Prillop currently works at University of Tartu. Külli does research in phonology. Her current project is ‚Estonian Quantity‘. This paper studies Estonian palatalization aastast on by describing the spectral centre of gravity (COG) of palatalized and non-palatalized Standard Estonian consonants [l t n s]. 43 subjects were asked to

Estonian as a second language is mostly taught to adults in language courses. The courses are very popular among the target group, but the effectiveness Language Foundation Tartu of the courses is not always very high: a Institute of Estonian and General LinguisticsJakobi 2, IV korrus 51005 Tartu linn, Tartu linn, Tartumaa EST

Agu BLEIVE of University of Tartu, Tartu | Contact Agu BLEIVE research institute 0 references part of University of Tartu Faculty of Arts and Humanities 0 references University of Tartu 0 references image Jakobi 2, TÜ humanitaarteaduste ja kunstide valdkond.jpg 4,160 × 3,120; 4.68 MB 0 references Külli does research in phonology field of work Estonian 0 references Finno-Ugric 0 references applied linguistics 0 references general Languages and censuses in Estonia While some census categories are not devised with an academic purpose (Arel 2002), census data include many self-reported variables of languages and national or

Rodolfo BASILE of University of Tartu, Tartu | Read 2 publications | Contact Rodolfo BASILE Brief overview of the South-Estonian Language and Cultural Studies Center’s fieldwork and Võro, Seto and Mulgi language examples from 2016–2018. In this paper I illustrate new ways of quote-introducing in Finnish and Estonian, with a focus upon non-reportative lexical material, used as quotative indexes in computer mediated communications

14. kansainvälinen fennougristikongressi Congressus Internationalis Fenno-Ugristarum on suomalais-ugrilaisten (uralilaisten) kielten, niitä puhuvien kansojen kulttuurin ja historian tutkimuksen tärkein kansainvälinen tiedetapahtuma. Kongresseja on järjestetty vuodesta 1960 lähtien viiden vuoden välein. 14. kansainvälinen fennougristikongressi (CIFU XIV) järjestettiin The conference takes place every two years, next one being LCR 2024 held at the University of Tartu (Estonia) at the Institute of Foreign Languages and Cultures and the Institute of Estonian and General Linguistics.

Helen PLADO, Lecturer of Estonian | Cited by 29 | of University of Tartu, Tartu | Read 17 publications | Contact Helen PLADO Urmas Sutrop, comp. and ed. (2018) „The most beautiful woman in the world: Snow White tales“. Tallinn: Estonian Language Foundation; Tartu: ELM Scholarly Press. 992 pp. The current collection

Riina Reinsalu currently works at the Institute of Estonian and General Linguistics , University of Tartu. Riina does research in Genre Analysis. Ann Veismann Associate Professor of General Linguistics, Programme Director for Estonian and Finno-Ugric Linguistics PhD (General Linguistics) It focuses on the linguistic factors that influence the choice of referential pronominals in spoken narrative discourse, and the relative importance of these factors in languages.