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pro vyhledávání: '"Joel Rini"'
Autor:
Joel Rini
Publikováno v:
Zeitschrift für romanische Philologie. 139:42-74
It is well known that the Spanish third person plural of -er and -ir verbs has two different preterite endings: primary -ieron, and the variant -eron, which appears after stem-final -j, e.g., dijeron, trajeron, tradujeron, etc., and that -eron arose
Autor:
Joel Rini
Publikováno v:
Romanische Forschungen. 134:299-324
A lo largo de la historia del español, varios sustantivos han vacilado entre un género y otro, por ejemplo, amor, honor, calor, y color, mientras que otros han cambiado de género por completo, por ejemplo, labor y sal cambiaron de masculino a feme
Autor:
Joel Rini
Publikováno v:
Iberoromania. 2021:137-155
The origin of –y of Sp. soy, doy, voy, estoy remains unresolved to date. The present study reconsiders and elaborates the ‘post-verbal yo hypothesis’, originally proposed by Ford (1911), which has been rejected by most scholars because they hav
Autor:
Joel Rini
Publikováno v:
Zeitschrift für romanische Philologie. 136:730-748
The pres. ind. paradigm of Sp. caber ‘to fit’ exhibits a synchronically irregular form in the 1st pers. sg., i.e., quepo, instead of a synchronically regular form derived from the infinitive, i.e., caber → *cabo. However, quepo is not considere
Autor:
Joel Rini
Publikováno v:
Studia Neophilologica. 92:111-123
Modern Spanish has twelve verbs that are considered synchronically irregular in the future indicative (and conditional) because they exhibit roots that are not comprised of the full form of the inf...
Autor:
Joel Rini
Publikováno v:
Bulletin of Spanish Studies. 96:1-16
The Spanish noun arte is unique in that it is, for all intents and purposes, masculine in the singular, but feminine in the plural, e.g. el arte culinario vs las artes culinarias. This noun was feminine in Latin, and in Old Spanish as well, but becau
Autor:
Joel Rini
Publikováno v:
Iberoromania. 2018:218-236
Summary Although Spanish philologists have long been aware of the origin of the first person plural imperative of the verb ir, ¡Vamos!, (as well as reflexive ¡Vámonos!), none has even remarked on the synchronic irregularity of the affirmative-nega
Autor:
Joel Rini, Edward H. Friedman, Jannine Montauban, Victoriano Roncero López, Enriqueta Zafra, Jeremy Roe, Nil Santiáñez, Maryellen Bieder, Andrew Walsh, Samuel Amago, Ann Davies, Eduardo Ledesma, Anthony Soares, Christina H. Lee, Juan Francisco Maura, Natalia Sobrevilla Perea, María Rosa Álvarez Sellers, Marina Kaplan, Kimberly A. Nance, Rebecca J. Atencio, Antoni Kapcia, Franklin W. Knight
Publikováno v:
Bulletin of Spanish Studies. 92:285-316
Autor:
Joel Rini
Publikováno v:
Zeitschrift für romanische Philologie. 130:430-451
The informal singular irregular imperatives of Spanish have traditionally been explained as the result of primarily phonological processes. However, such an approach presents various problems which to date are unresolved: d?c > di, but f?c > faz > ha