2018
DOI: 10.1007/s11185-017-9187-z
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Гоноративное Употребление Третьего Лица Множественного Числа В Славянских Языках

Abstract: Although much has been written about polite forms of address in Slavic, the grammatical expression of respect for a person that does not take part in the conversation has hitherto received little to no attention. Yet this type of honorific reference is widely found in the Slavic languages, especially in dialects and substandard varieties. In the present article I shall distinguish between three types of honorific reference to a person spoken about and focus on the type that I think is most current in Slavic di… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…In an important recent publication, Houtzagers (2018) shows that a similar split occurs in a range of rural and nonstandard Slavic dialects. Although second-person honorification conforms to the stranger social profile similarly observed in other European languages, nonparticipant (or third-person) honorification is typically restricted to senior kin of speaker and priests.…”
Section: Pr Agmatic Structure: Addressing Europementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In an important recent publication, Houtzagers (2018) shows that a similar split occurs in a range of rural and nonstandard Slavic dialects. Although second-person honorification conforms to the stranger social profile similarly observed in other European languages, nonparticipant (or third-person) honorification is typically restricted to senior kin of speaker and priests.…”
Section: Pr Agmatic Structure: Addressing Europementioning
confidence: 99%