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On-site clinical study of Dative/Accusative case errors by native Russian, Bulgarian and Latvian speakers with acoustico-amnestic (transcortical sensory) aphasia.
Anissava Miltenova and Cynthia Vakareliyska, eds. Sofia: Prof. Marin Drinov Academic Publishing House 2010.
Research Interests:
Research Interests:
List of the most common modern Lithuanian roots, suffixes and prefixes together with their English meanings. https://slavica.indiana.edu/bookListings/linguistics/Lithuanian_Root_List
Research Interests:
Research Interests:
This Russian-language novella was my senior thesis at Princeton University in 1973. I started writing the novella after returning from a semester at Leningrad State University as an undergraduate student on the first CIEE semester... more
This Russian-language novella was my senior thesis at Princeton University in 1973. I started writing the novella after returning from a semester at Leningrad State University as an undergraduate student on the first CIEE semester exchange program, in 1970-71. All characters in the work, including the first-person narrator, are entirely fictional and bear no intended resemblance to any actual persons, either living or dead. The plot is also fictional, but descriptions of most of the physical settings, and some of the brief vignettes, were based on my observations of life at Leningrad State University during the Brezhnev era—from a Westerner's perspective, of course. It is that perspective that I hope might make this piece of some potential research usefulness despite its questionable literary merit, as a fictionalized record of what it was like to be an American student in Leningrad during that time period.