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Russian Grammar Workbook
Taschenbuch von David Gillespie (u. a.)
Sprache: Englisch

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Beschreibung
The second edition of A Russian Grammar Workbook provides a rigorous and hands-on approach to Russian grammar for students who are intent on mastering the nuance and complexities of this language.
* Revised and updated version of the popular and comprehensive workbook offering detailed coverage of all aspects of Russian grammar
* New edition reflects changes in Russian lexis and grammar over the past few years
* Features over 230 sets of structured exercises
* Packed with activities ranging from substitution drills and multiple choice questions, to grammatical quizzes and translation exercises
* May be used independently or in conjunction with Wade's A Comprehensive Russian Grammar, 3rd edition; a transparent structure links directly to the Grammar for ease of reference between the two volumes
The second edition of A Russian Grammar Workbook provides a rigorous and hands-on approach to Russian grammar for students who are intent on mastering the nuance and complexities of this language.
* Revised and updated version of the popular and comprehensive workbook offering detailed coverage of all aspects of Russian grammar
* New edition reflects changes in Russian lexis and grammar over the past few years
* Features over 230 sets of structured exercises
* Packed with activities ranging from substitution drills and multiple choice questions, to grammatical quizzes and translation exercises
* May be used independently or in conjunction with Wade's A Comprehensive Russian Grammar, 3rd edition; a transparent structure links directly to the Grammar for ease of reference between the two volumes
Über den Autor

Terence Wade (1930?2005) was Professor Emeritus and Research Fellow in Russian Studies at the University of Strathclyde, Glasgow. He wrote 12 books, including Prepositions in Modern Russian (1985), Russian Etymological Dictionary (1996), The Russian Language Today (with Larissa Ryazanova-Clarke, 1999), and A Comprehensive Russian Grammar, third edition (revised by David Gillespie, Wiley-Blackwell, 2010).

David Gillespie is Professor of Russian at the University of Bath, UK, where he has taught Russian language and culture since 1985. He is the author of 8 books and more than 50 papers on modern Russian literature and film.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Preface to the First Edition xv

Preface to the Second Edition xvi

The Noun 1

Gender

1 First and second declensions [30-2, 34] 1

2 Soft-sign nouns [33] 2

3 Common gender [35] 2

4 Indeclinable nouns of foreign origin [36] 2

5 Differentiation of gender through suffixes. Professions [43-4] 3

6 Animals [45] 4

Declension

7 Animacy [47] 4

8 Nouns which have a plural form only [49] 5

9 First declension: masculine nouns [50-2] 5

10 Partitive genitive in -¿/-¿ [53] 6

11 Prepositional/locative singular in -ý/- [54] 7

12 Special masculine plural forms [55] 7

13 First declension: neuter nouns in -o [58] 8

14 First declension: nouns in -e, -¿¿, -¿, -¿¿ [59] 9

15 Second declension: nouns in -¿/-¿ [61] 9

16 Third declension: soft-sign feminine nouns [63] 11

17 Declension of neuter nouns in -¿¿ [64] 12

18 Declension of nouns in -¿¿/-¿¿ [65] 12

19 ¿é¿¿ and ¿ ¿¿ [68] 12

20 Declension of first names/surnames [69-70] 13

21 Apposition in the names of publications, towns etc. [72] 13

22 Agreement of ¿¿¿, ¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿ó etc. [75] 14

Case Usage

23 The nominative [77] 14

24 The accusative [79] 15

25 The genitive [80-2] 15

26 The partitive genitive [83-4] 16

27 Genitive and negative [86] 17

28 Genitive and accusative after negated verbs [87] 17

29 Verbs that take the genitive [88] 18

30 The dative as indirect object of a verb [89] 21

31 Verbs that take the dative [90] 21

32 Impersonal constructions using the dative [92] 22

33 The instrumental of function [94] 23

34 The instrumental in passive constructions [96] 23

35 Verbs that take the instrumental [99] 24

36 The instrumental of dimension [101] 24

37 The instrumental as predicate [102] 25

38 Nouns in apposition [103] 26

Revision exercises: case usage 26

The Pronoun 31

39 Personal pronouns [110] 31

40 The pronoun ¿ [113] 32

41 The pronouns ¿¿ and ¿¿ [115] 32

42 The third-person pronouns (¿¿, ¿¿á, ¿¿ó, ¿¿ ) [116] 33

43 The Reflexive pronoun ¿¿¿ [117] 33

44 The possessive pronouns ¿¿¿, ¿¿¿¿, ¿¿¿, ¿¿¿ [118] 34

45 The possessive pronouns ¿¿ó, ¿¿, ¿¿ [119] 34

46 The Reflexive possessive pronoun ¿¿¿¿, ¿¿¿ , ¿¿¿¿,¿¿¿ [120] 35

47 ¿¿¿, ¿¿¿, ¿¿¿ó¿, ¿¿¿ó¿¿¿, ¿¿¿ as interrogative pronouns [121-2] 35

48 ¿¿¿ó¿¿¿, ¿¿¿, ¿¿¿ and ¿¿¿ as relative pronouns [123] 36

49 The demonstrative pronouns ¿¿¿ and ¿¿¿ [125-6] 38

50 ¿¿¿ and ¿á¿¿¿ [131] 38

51 ¿¿¿¿, ¿é¿¿¿, ¿¿B¿¿¿, ¿á¿¿¿¿, ¿¿¿ó¿ [132] 39

52 ¿¿¿¿ó [134] 39

53 ¿¿¿¿ó [135] 40

54 ¿¿¿¿¿ó¿ and ¿¿¿é¿ [136] 41

55 The 'potential' negative pronouns ¿é¿¿¿¿, ¿é¿¿¿¿ [137] 41

56 Indefinite pronouns with the particles -¿¿, -¿¿¿¿¿¿ [138] 42

57 ¿é¿¿¿¿¿¿¿ [141] 44

58 Other parts of speech which can also function as pronouns [143] 44

The Adjective 45

The Long Form of the Adjective

59 'Mixed' declension [146] 45

60 Soft-ending adjectives [147] 45

61 Formation of adjectives from nouns: the suffixes -¿-, -¿¿-and -ö-/-e¿- [148] 46

62 Attributive use of the long adjective [155] 46

63 Use of the long adjective with predicative meaning [156] 48

Revision exercises: declension of adjectives 48

The Short Form of the Adjective

64 Endings of the short form of the adjective [159] 50

65 The mobile vowels -¿-, -o- and -¿- in the masculine short form [161] 50

66 Some special short forms [162] 50

67 Short forms: pairs of opposites [168] 51

68 Adjectives of dimension [169] 51

69 Delimitation of meaning by the oblique case of a noun or pronoun [170] 52

70 Delimitation of meaning by a prepositional phrase [171] 53

Revision exercises: short-form and long-form adjectives 53

The Comparative Degree of the Adjective

71 The attributive comparative with ¿ó¿¿¿ [177] 55

72 One-word attributive comparatives [178] 56

73 Predicative comparative forms in -¿¿ [179] 56

74 Comparative short forms in -e in predicative meaning [180-1] 57

75 Constructions with the comparative [182] 58

76 Other functions of the short-form comparative [184] 59

The Superlative Degree of the Adjective

77 The superlative degree with ¿á¿¿¿ [185] 60

78 ¿b¿I¿¿¿¿ and ¿¿¿¿¿¿ [186] 60

The Numeral 61

Cardinal, Collective and Indefinite Numerals

79 The cardinal numeral [190] 61

80 Declension of cardinal numerals [191] 62

81 The numeral ¿¿¿¿, ¿¿¿á, ¿¿¿ó, ¿¿¿¿ [193] 62

82 ¿¿¿¿¿¿á/¿¿¿¿¿¿b¿I, ¿¿¿/¿¿¿, ¿¿¿, ¿¿¿H¿¿, ó¿¿/ó¿¿ [194] 63

83 Numerals five and above [195] 64

84 Agreement of oblique cases of numerals ¿¿¿¿¿¿á/¿¿¿¿¿¿b¿I to 999 with oblique plural forms of nouns [196] 65

85 Declension of compound numerals [198] 66

86 Collective numerals [200] 67

87 Indefinite numerals [201] 68

88 Agreement of the predicate with a subject that contains a numeral [202] 69

Ordinal Numerals

89 Formation of ordinal numerals. Usage [203-4] 70

Special Functions of Numerals

90 Telling the time [206] 71

91 Giving the date [207] 73

92 Numerals in compound nouns and adjectives [211] 74

The Verb 75

Conjugation

93 First-conjugation verbs with stems ending in a vowel [215] 75

94 First-conjugation verbs with consonant stems I [216] 77

95 First-conjugation verbs with consonant stems II: verbs in -¿¿¿ with consonant mutation throughout conjugation [217] 78

96 First-conjugation verbs with consonant stems III: verbs in -¿¿, -¿¿¿/-¿¿¿, -¿¿ [218] 79

97 Present-future endings in the second conjugation [220-1] 81

98 Consonant change in the conjugation of second-conjugation verbs [222] 82

Revision exercises: conjugation of verbs 82

99 The verb 'to be' [226] 84

100 Formation of and stress in the imperative [227-8] 85

Revision exercise: imperative mood 86

101 Formation of the past tense [230-1] 86

102 The mobile vowel -o- in conjugation [234] 89

Aspect

103 Introductory [235]. Formation of the perfective by prefixation [239].Submeanings of perfectives [242] 89

104 The formation of imperfectives from prefixed first-conjugation verbs [244] 91

105 Secondary imperfectives based on second-conjugation verbs [246] 91

106 Consonant mutation in secondary imperfectives based on second-conjugation verbs [247] 91

107 Secondary imperfectives based on monosyllabic verbs [248] 92

108 The differentiation of aspects by conjugation. Aspectival pairs with different roots. Verbs which are reflexive in the imperfective aspect only [250-2] 92

109 Compounds of -¿¿¿¿¿¿ [253] 94

110 Meanings of verbal prefixes [254] 94

111 The imperfective and perfective aspects [255] 95

112 Aspect in the present tense [256] 97

113 Aspect in the past tense [257] 98

114 Use of the imperfective past to denote an action and its reverse [259] 99

115 Use of the imperfective past to denote a forthcoming event [261] 100

116 Negated verbs in the past [262] 100

117 Aspect in the future [263] 101

118 The 'logical' future [264] 102

119 The future in reported speech [265] 102

120 Use of the future to express repeated actions [266] 103

121 Use of the imperative in the context of a single action [270] 103

122 Use of the imperative to exhort and invite [271] 104

123 Negative commands/warnings [273] 104

124 Aspect in the infinitive. Introductory [276] 105

125 Use of the infinitive to denote habitual actions [277] 105

126 Use of the imperfective infinitive after verbs of beginning, continuing and concluding [278] 106

127 Inadvisable and advisable actions [279] 106

128 A request to perform/not to perform an action [280] 107

Revision exercises: aspect 108

Reflexive Verbs

129 Reflexive verbs. The 'true' Reflexive [284-5] 110

130 Intransitive Reflexives [287] 111

131 Reflexive verbs with passive meaning [288] 112

132 Reciprocal meanings [289] 112

The Passive Voice

133 The passive voice [300-3] 113

The Conditional and Subjunctive Moods

134 The conditional mood [304-5] 114

135 Use of the subjunctive to express wish or desire [308] 115

136 The subjunctive of purposeful endeavour [309] 116

137 Purpose clauses [310] 117

138 The expression of hypothesis [311] 117

139 Concessive constructions [312] 118

Constructions Expressing Obligation, Necessity, Possibility or Potential

140 The expression of obligation and necessity [313] 119

141 The expression of possibility or potential [314] 120

Verbs of Motion

142 Unidirectional and multidirectional verbs of motion. Conjugation [315-16] 121

143 Imperatives and past tense of verbs of motion...

Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2012
Genre: Allg. & vergl. Sprachwissenschaft
Rubrik: Sprachwissenschaft
Medium: Taschenbuch
Inhalt: 272 S.
ISBN-13: 9781118273418
ISBN-10: 1118273419
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Autor: Gillespie, David
Wade, Terence
Hersteller: John Wiley & Sons
John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Maße: 244 x 170 x 15 mm
Von/Mit: David Gillespie (u. a.)
Erscheinungsdatum: 10.08.2012
Gewicht: 0,472 kg
Artikel-ID: 106527604
Über den Autor

Terence Wade (1930?2005) was Professor Emeritus and Research Fellow in Russian Studies at the University of Strathclyde, Glasgow. He wrote 12 books, including Prepositions in Modern Russian (1985), Russian Etymological Dictionary (1996), The Russian Language Today (with Larissa Ryazanova-Clarke, 1999), and A Comprehensive Russian Grammar, third edition (revised by David Gillespie, Wiley-Blackwell, 2010).

David Gillespie is Professor of Russian at the University of Bath, UK, where he has taught Russian language and culture since 1985. He is the author of 8 books and more than 50 papers on modern Russian literature and film.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Preface to the First Edition xv

Preface to the Second Edition xvi

The Noun 1

Gender

1 First and second declensions [30-2, 34] 1

2 Soft-sign nouns [33] 2

3 Common gender [35] 2

4 Indeclinable nouns of foreign origin [36] 2

5 Differentiation of gender through suffixes. Professions [43-4] 3

6 Animals [45] 4

Declension

7 Animacy [47] 4

8 Nouns which have a plural form only [49] 5

9 First declension: masculine nouns [50-2] 5

10 Partitive genitive in -¿/-¿ [53] 6

11 Prepositional/locative singular in -ý/- [54] 7

12 Special masculine plural forms [55] 7

13 First declension: neuter nouns in -o [58] 8

14 First declension: nouns in -e, -¿¿, -¿, -¿¿ [59] 9

15 Second declension: nouns in -¿/-¿ [61] 9

16 Third declension: soft-sign feminine nouns [63] 11

17 Declension of neuter nouns in -¿¿ [64] 12

18 Declension of nouns in -¿¿/-¿¿ [65] 12

19 ¿é¿¿ and ¿ ¿¿ [68] 12

20 Declension of first names/surnames [69-70] 13

21 Apposition in the names of publications, towns etc. [72] 13

22 Agreement of ¿¿¿, ¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿ó etc. [75] 14

Case Usage

23 The nominative [77] 14

24 The accusative [79] 15

25 The genitive [80-2] 15

26 The partitive genitive [83-4] 16

27 Genitive and negative [86] 17

28 Genitive and accusative after negated verbs [87] 17

29 Verbs that take the genitive [88] 18

30 The dative as indirect object of a verb [89] 21

31 Verbs that take the dative [90] 21

32 Impersonal constructions using the dative [92] 22

33 The instrumental of function [94] 23

34 The instrumental in passive constructions [96] 23

35 Verbs that take the instrumental [99] 24

36 The instrumental of dimension [101] 24

37 The instrumental as predicate [102] 25

38 Nouns in apposition [103] 26

Revision exercises: case usage 26

The Pronoun 31

39 Personal pronouns [110] 31

40 The pronoun ¿ [113] 32

41 The pronouns ¿¿ and ¿¿ [115] 32

42 The third-person pronouns (¿¿, ¿¿á, ¿¿ó, ¿¿ ) [116] 33

43 The Reflexive pronoun ¿¿¿ [117] 33

44 The possessive pronouns ¿¿¿, ¿¿¿¿, ¿¿¿, ¿¿¿ [118] 34

45 The possessive pronouns ¿¿ó, ¿¿, ¿¿ [119] 34

46 The Reflexive possessive pronoun ¿¿¿¿, ¿¿¿ , ¿¿¿¿,¿¿¿ [120] 35

47 ¿¿¿, ¿¿¿, ¿¿¿ó¿, ¿¿¿ó¿¿¿, ¿¿¿ as interrogative pronouns [121-2] 35

48 ¿¿¿ó¿¿¿, ¿¿¿, ¿¿¿ and ¿¿¿ as relative pronouns [123] 36

49 The demonstrative pronouns ¿¿¿ and ¿¿¿ [125-6] 38

50 ¿¿¿ and ¿á¿¿¿ [131] 38

51 ¿¿¿¿, ¿é¿¿¿, ¿¿B¿¿¿, ¿á¿¿¿¿, ¿¿¿ó¿ [132] 39

52 ¿¿¿¿ó [134] 39

53 ¿¿¿¿ó [135] 40

54 ¿¿¿¿¿ó¿ and ¿¿¿é¿ [136] 41

55 The 'potential' negative pronouns ¿é¿¿¿¿, ¿é¿¿¿¿ [137] 41

56 Indefinite pronouns with the particles -¿¿, -¿¿¿¿¿¿ [138] 42

57 ¿é¿¿¿¿¿¿¿ [141] 44

58 Other parts of speech which can also function as pronouns [143] 44

The Adjective 45

The Long Form of the Adjective

59 'Mixed' declension [146] 45

60 Soft-ending adjectives [147] 45

61 Formation of adjectives from nouns: the suffixes -¿-, -¿¿-and -ö-/-e¿- [148] 46

62 Attributive use of the long adjective [155] 46

63 Use of the long adjective with predicative meaning [156] 48

Revision exercises: declension of adjectives 48

The Short Form of the Adjective

64 Endings of the short form of the adjective [159] 50

65 The mobile vowels -¿-, -o- and -¿- in the masculine short form [161] 50

66 Some special short forms [162] 50

67 Short forms: pairs of opposites [168] 51

68 Adjectives of dimension [169] 51

69 Delimitation of meaning by the oblique case of a noun or pronoun [170] 52

70 Delimitation of meaning by a prepositional phrase [171] 53

Revision exercises: short-form and long-form adjectives 53

The Comparative Degree of the Adjective

71 The attributive comparative with ¿ó¿¿¿ [177] 55

72 One-word attributive comparatives [178] 56

73 Predicative comparative forms in -¿¿ [179] 56

74 Comparative short forms in -e in predicative meaning [180-1] 57

75 Constructions with the comparative [182] 58

76 Other functions of the short-form comparative [184] 59

The Superlative Degree of the Adjective

77 The superlative degree with ¿á¿¿¿ [185] 60

78 ¿b¿I¿¿¿¿ and ¿¿¿¿¿¿ [186] 60

The Numeral 61

Cardinal, Collective and Indefinite Numerals

79 The cardinal numeral [190] 61

80 Declension of cardinal numerals [191] 62

81 The numeral ¿¿¿¿, ¿¿¿á, ¿¿¿ó, ¿¿¿¿ [193] 62

82 ¿¿¿¿¿¿á/¿¿¿¿¿¿b¿I, ¿¿¿/¿¿¿, ¿¿¿, ¿¿¿H¿¿, ó¿¿/ó¿¿ [194] 63

83 Numerals five and above [195] 64

84 Agreement of oblique cases of numerals ¿¿¿¿¿¿á/¿¿¿¿¿¿b¿I to 999 with oblique plural forms of nouns [196] 65

85 Declension of compound numerals [198] 66

86 Collective numerals [200] 67

87 Indefinite numerals [201] 68

88 Agreement of the predicate with a subject that contains a numeral [202] 69

Ordinal Numerals

89 Formation of ordinal numerals. Usage [203-4] 70

Special Functions of Numerals

90 Telling the time [206] 71

91 Giving the date [207] 73

92 Numerals in compound nouns and adjectives [211] 74

The Verb 75

Conjugation

93 First-conjugation verbs with stems ending in a vowel [215] 75

94 First-conjugation verbs with consonant stems I [216] 77

95 First-conjugation verbs with consonant stems II: verbs in -¿¿¿ with consonant mutation throughout conjugation [217] 78

96 First-conjugation verbs with consonant stems III: verbs in -¿¿, -¿¿¿/-¿¿¿, -¿¿ [218] 79

97 Present-future endings in the second conjugation [220-1] 81

98 Consonant change in the conjugation of second-conjugation verbs [222] 82

Revision exercises: conjugation of verbs 82

99 The verb 'to be' [226] 84

100 Formation of and stress in the imperative [227-8] 85

Revision exercise: imperative mood 86

101 Formation of the past tense [230-1] 86

102 The mobile vowel -o- in conjugation [234] 89

Aspect

103 Introductory [235]. Formation of the perfective by prefixation [239].Submeanings of perfectives [242] 89

104 The formation of imperfectives from prefixed first-conjugation verbs [244] 91

105 Secondary imperfectives based on second-conjugation verbs [246] 91

106 Consonant mutation in secondary imperfectives based on second-conjugation verbs [247] 91

107 Secondary imperfectives based on monosyllabic verbs [248] 92

108 The differentiation of aspects by conjugation. Aspectival pairs with different roots. Verbs which are reflexive in the imperfective aspect only [250-2] 92

109 Compounds of -¿¿¿¿¿¿ [253] 94

110 Meanings of verbal prefixes [254] 94

111 The imperfective and perfective aspects [255] 95

112 Aspect in the present tense [256] 97

113 Aspect in the past tense [257] 98

114 Use of the imperfective past to denote an action and its reverse [259] 99

115 Use of the imperfective past to denote a forthcoming event [261] 100

116 Negated verbs in the past [262] 100

117 Aspect in the future [263] 101

118 The 'logical' future [264] 102

119 The future in reported speech [265] 102

120 Use of the future to express repeated actions [266] 103

121 Use of the imperative in the context of a single action [270] 103

122 Use of the imperative to exhort and invite [271] 104

123 Negative commands/warnings [273] 104

124 Aspect in the infinitive. Introductory [276] 105

125 Use of the infinitive to denote habitual actions [277] 105

126 Use of the imperfective infinitive after verbs of beginning, continuing and concluding [278] 106

127 Inadvisable and advisable actions [279] 106

128 A request to perform/not to perform an action [280] 107

Revision exercises: aspect 108

Reflexive Verbs

129 Reflexive verbs. The 'true' Reflexive [284-5] 110

130 Intransitive Reflexives [287] 111

131 Reflexive verbs with passive meaning [288] 112

132 Reciprocal meanings [289] 112

The Passive Voice

133 The passive voice [300-3] 113

The Conditional and Subjunctive Moods

134 The conditional mood [304-5] 114

135 Use of the subjunctive to express wish or desire [308] 115

136 The subjunctive of purposeful endeavour [309] 116

137 Purpose clauses [310] 117

138 The expression of hypothesis [311] 117

139 Concessive constructions [312] 118

Constructions Expressing Obligation, Necessity, Possibility or Potential

140 The expression of obligation and necessity [313] 119

141 The expression of possibility or potential [314] 120

Verbs of Motion

142 Unidirectional and multidirectional verbs of motion. Conjugation [315-16] 121

143 Imperatives and past tense of verbs of motion...

Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2012
Genre: Allg. & vergl. Sprachwissenschaft
Rubrik: Sprachwissenschaft
Medium: Taschenbuch
Inhalt: 272 S.
ISBN-13: 9781118273418
ISBN-10: 1118273419
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Autor: Gillespie, David
Wade, Terence
Hersteller: John Wiley & Sons
John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Maße: 244 x 170 x 15 mm
Von/Mit: David Gillespie (u. a.)
Erscheinungsdatum: 10.08.2012
Gewicht: 0,472 kg
Artikel-ID: 106527604
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