Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Morae in Estonian. A reply to Natalja Kuznetsova’s paper “Estonian word prosody on the Procrustean bed of morae”

View through CrossRef
This reply to Natalja Kuznetsova highlights many questionable interpretations and outcomes, ten serious errors and five minor inaccuracies in her polemical paper “Estonian word prosody on the Procrustean bed of morae” (2018). The proposed list of errors includes misinterpretations of Estonian language data, faulty citations and biased conclusions. Kokkuvõte. Külli Prillop: Moorad eesti keeles. Vastus Natalja Kuznetsova artiklile “Eesti sõnaprosoodia moorade Prokrustese sängis”. Vastus Natalja Kuznetsovale toob välja mitu küsitavat tõlgendust ja tulemust, kümme tõsist viga ja viis väiksemat ebatäpsust tema poleemilises artiklis “Estonian word prosody on the Procrustean bed of morae”. Esitatud loend vigadest sisaldab eesti keeleandmete väärtõlgendusi, vigaseid tsitaate ja kallutatud järeldusi.
Title: Morae in Estonian. A reply to Natalja Kuznetsova’s paper “Estonian word prosody on the Procrustean bed of morae”
Description:
This reply to Natalja Kuznetsova highlights many questionable interpretations and outcomes, ten serious errors and five minor inaccuracies in her polemical paper “Estonian word prosody on the Procrustean bed of morae” (2018).
The proposed list of errors includes misinterpretations of Estonian language data, faulty citations and biased conclusions.
Kokkuvõte.
Külli Prillop: Moorad eesti keeles.
Vastus Natalja Kuznetsova artiklile “Eesti sõnaprosoodia moorade Prokrustese sängis”.
Vastus Natalja Kuznetsovale toob välja mitu küsitavat tõlgendust ja tulemust, kümme tõsist viga ja viis väiksemat ebatäpsust tema poleemilises artiklis “Estonian word prosody on the Procrustean bed of morae”.
Esitatud loend vigadest sisaldab eesti keeleandmete väärtõlgendusi, vigaseid tsitaate ja kallutatud järeldusi.

Related Results

Estonian Language. Second Edition. Linguistica Uralica. Supplementary Series 1, Tallinn 2007
Estonian Language. Second Edition. Linguistica Uralica. Supplementary Series 1, Tallinn 2007
The Estonian language belongs to the Finnic group of the Finno-Ugric lan­guage family. Today there are about 1.1 million native speakers of Estonian. Most of them (about 0.94 mill...
Prosody and Meter: Early Modern to 19th Century
Prosody and Meter: Early Modern to 19th Century
Both of the terms prosody and meter have shifting and contested definitions in the history of English literature. Historically, prosody was a grammatical term adopted from early tr...
How does bed load transport influence the longitudinal profile of reservoir sedimentation?
How does bed load transport influence the longitudinal profile of reservoir sedimentation?
The construction of the reservoir has destroyed the equilibrium of the natural river and promoted the siltation of a large amount of sediment in the reservoir. The longitudinal pro...
JOHANN SAMUEL FRIEDRICH BOUBRIGI SÜNTAKSILOENGUD TARTU ÜLIKOOLIS; pp. 62–121
JOHANN SAMUEL FRIEDRICH BOUBRIGI SÜNTAKSILOENGUD TARTU ÜLIKOOLIS; pp. 62–121
Johann Samuel Friedrich Boubrig’s lectures on syntax at the University of Tartu The article gives a detailed overview of the lectures on Estonian syntax delivered by Johann Samu...
Prosody Improves Detection of Spoonerisms Versus Both Sensible and Nonsense Phrases
Prosody Improves Detection of Spoonerisms Versus Both Sensible and Nonsense Phrases
Prosody is the pattern of inflection, pitch, and intensity that communicates emotional meaning above and beyond the individual meanings of lexical items and gestures during spoken ...
Overt and implicit prosody contribute to neurophysiological responses previously attributed to grammatical processing
Overt and implicit prosody contribute to neurophysiological responses previously attributed to grammatical processing
AbstractRecent neurophysiological research suggests that slow cortical activity tracks hierarchical syntactic structure during online sentence processing. Here we tested an alterna...
Overt and covert prosody are reflected in neurophysiological responses previously attributed to grammatical processing
Overt and covert prosody are reflected in neurophysiological responses previously attributed to grammatical processing
AbstractRecent neurophysiological research suggests that slow cortical activity tracks hierarchical syntactic structure during online sentence processing (e.g., Ding, Melloni, Zhan...

Back to Top