Tatiana Reznikova
List of John Benjamins publications in which Tatiana Reznikova is
involved.
Title
The Typology of Physical Qualities
Edited by Ekaterina Rakhilina, Tatiana Reznikova and Daria Ryzhova
What is it like? – This is often the first question we ask about any object, and it is typically answered with adjectives: old, smooth, pointed, narrow, etc. Characteristics of things around us is a fundamental aspect of how we conceptualize the physical world, regardless of when or where we live –… read moreArticles
Rakhilina, Ekaterina and Tatiana Reznikova 2022
Chapter 1. Introduction: The frame-based approach to the typology of qualities The Typology of Physical Qualities, Rakhilina, Ekaterina, Tatiana Reznikova and Daria Ryzhova (eds.), pp. 1–28 | Chapter The chapter outlines the goals of our project, points out the aspects that distinguish the vocabulary of qualities from other lexical domains, when viewed from a typological perspective, and introduces the methods of data collection and analysis we use in this project and in other related… read more Reznikova, Tatiana, Anna Panina and Victoriya Kruglyakova 2022
Chapter 3. A matter of degree? The domain of wetness in a typological perspective The Typology of Physical Qualities, Rakhilina, Ekaterina, Tatiana Reznikova and Daria Ryzhova (eds.), pp. 57–78 | Chapter The article studies the domain of wetness in 20 languages. In many of them the domain features two main words (e.g. German nass, feucht; Mongolian nojton, čijgleg; Moksha načkə, l’et’kə) and the difference between them tends to be described in terms of degree, i.e. ‘intensely’ versus ‘slightly… read more Reznikova, Tatiana, Ekaterina Rakhilina, Olga Karpova, Maria Kyuseva, Daria Ryzhova and Timofey Arkhangelskiy 2013
Polysemy Patterns in Russian Adjectives and Adverbs: A corpus-oriented database Current Studies in Slavic Linguistics, Kor Chahine, Irina (ed.), pp. 313–322 | Article The paper presents a research tool for studying semantic change and polysemy patterns in Russian adjectives and adverbs. It is based on a corpus analysis of high-freqency polysemous units. For each of them we describe the meanings it can have, assign to each meaning a corresponding taxonomic class,… read more