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Russian Declension and Conjugation Chapter 4: Adjective Declension

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Russian Declension and Conjugation. Chapter 4: Adjective Declension. Adjectival endings. There are three types of endings, depending upon the final stem consonant, which is either hard paired, soft paired, or unpaired. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Russian Declension and Conjugation

Russian Declension and Conjugation

Chapter 4: Adjective Declension

Page 2: Russian Declension and Conjugation

Adjectival endings

• There are three types of endings, depending upon the final stem consonant, which is either hard paired, soft paired, or unpaired.

• However, all the spelling rules apply regularly, so if you know those, you are set

Page 3: Russian Declension and Conjugation

Getting shortchanged

• Only one kind of adjective has short forms – what is it?

• What is the other kind of adjective that this kind is contrasted with?

Page 4: Russian Declension and Conjugation

Getting shortchanged

• Only one kind of adjective has short forms – what is it?– Only qualitative adjectives have short forms:

пьяный, пьян• What is the other kind of adjective that this

kind is contrasted with?– Relational adjectives, which do NOT have

short forms: деревянный

Page 5: Russian Declension and Conjugation

Huh?

• What’s a “predicate complement”?

Page 6: Russian Declension and Conjugation

Huh?

• What’s a “predicate complement”?–А noun phrase (noun and/or

adjective) that follows a verb meaning ‘be’, as in: он пьян

Page 7: Russian Declension and Conjugation

Stress patterns

• What are the basic stress patterns for long and short forms?

Page 8: Russian Declension and Conjugation

Stress patterns

• What are the basic stress patterns for long and short forms?– Long forms:

• Fixed stem• Fixed ending (on 1st syllable of ending)

– Short forms:• Fixed stem• Fixed ending• Shifting stem (masc/neut/pl) > ending (fem)

Page 9: Russian Declension and Conjugation

Why?

• The fill vowel behaves the same in adjectives as it does in nouns, but there is only one fill vowel, and it is o.– Why is that?

Page 10: Russian Declension and Conjugation

Why?

• The fill vowel behaves the same in adjectives as it does in nouns, but there is only one fill vowel, and it is o.– Why is that?– Because no adjectival stem ends in

–K _ C’ or c, or _ j (-stress)

Page 11: Russian Declension and Conjugation

By the way…

• The same rule for softening the consonant before the fill vowel applies to adjectives– Do you remember it?

Page 12: Russian Declension and Conjugation

By the way…

• The same rule for softening the consonant before the fill vowel applies to adjectives– Do you remember it?– You usually get softening before o

(чудён), except:• If the fill vowel is followed by k (тонок)• If the fill vowel is in a root ending in a

hard consonant (зол)

Page 13: Russian Declension and Conjugation

Do you believe him?

• On p. 51 Levin says that the fill vowel is i in достоин. What do you think about that?

Page 14: Russian Declension and Conjugation

Do you believe him?

• On p. 51 Levin says that the fill vowel is i in достоин. What do you think about that?– This is just an orthographic convention for this

word. As you well know, both {dostojon} and {dostojin} would yield [dastojin].

Page 15: Russian Declension and Conjugation

What do these stress types mean?

___|____ + _________ + _|_

___x____ + _________ + _x_

____\___ + __

Page 16: Russian Declension and Conjugation

What do these stress types mean?

___|____ + _________ + _|_

___x____ + _________ + _x_

____\___ + __

Fixed long and short

Fixed long, shifting short

Fixed stem for long, fixed ending for short

Page 17: Russian Declension and Conjugation

What do these symbols mean?

[<-] [/] (p) (m)

Page 18: Russian Declension and Conjugation

What do these symbols mean?

[<-] [/] (p) (m)

Retraction to first syllable in masc, neut, pl short form

Fill vowel has irregular stress in masc short form

Stress variation in plural short form

Stress variation in masc short form

Page 19: Russian Declension and Conjugation

Comparatives….wait a minute!

• But I thought that лучший and больший were comparatives, and they don’t end in –ee or –e. What’s going on here?

Page 20: Russian Declension and Conjugation

Comparatives….wait a minute!

• But I thought that лучший and больший were comparatives, and they don’t end in –ee or –e. What’s going on here?– Лучший and больший are attributive

adjectives, independent words. They are not merely forms derived from adjectives, and they are not limited to the predicate position.

Page 21: Russian Declension and Conjugation

What goes where?

• What is the distribution of comparative formants?

Page 22: Russian Declension and Conjugation

What goes where?

• What is the distribution of comparative formants?– -ee for adjectives with suffixes other than -/k or

–ok, and some unsuffixed adjectives• If fem short form is stressed, so is

comparative formant– -e for unsuffixed adjectives and adjectives

suffixed in -/k or –ok• Final C mutates and –k usually drops

– Some irregular adjectives have -še, -že, -šče