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year,month,day,author,title,abstract
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2025,3,25,"Eva Poliakova (HSE University)","Field notes on Khwarshi: the biabsolutive construction and information structure (PART 2)","This talk will be dedicated to two topics which were the focus of my research during a field trip to the Khwarshi language (Nakh-Daghestanian) that took place in January of this year. Therefore, the talk will be divided into two parts.
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First, I will discuss the biabsolutive construction in Khwarshi. In this construction both arguments of a transitive verb are marked by the absolutive case, and the verb form is restricted to (periphrastic) progressive. I will discuss some of its properties, including ones that were not discussed before (e.g. its behavior in an embedded clause). I will also show that some speakers allow forming an absolutive construction not only with a progressive form, but also with a resultative one, though in this case some additional restrictions seem to hold.
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Second, I will discuss some findings about information structure in Khwarshi. This topic was investigated mostly based on question-answer tasks and tasks involving picture description. I will show that different word orders can be used to mark focus in Khwarshi, including insertion of the focused constituent inside a periphrastic verb form and inversion of lexical verb and auxiliary."
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2025,3,18,"Eva Poliakova (HSE University)","Field notes on Khwarshi: the biabsolutive construction and information structure","This talk will be dedicated to two topics which were the focus of my research during a field trip to the Khwarshi language (Nakh-Daghestanian) that took place in January of this year. Therefore, the talk will be divided into two parts.
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First, I will discuss the biabsolutive construction in Khwarshi. In this construction both arguments of a transitive verb are marked by the absolutive case, and the verb form is restricted to (periphrastic) progressive. I will discuss some of its properties, including ones that were not discussed before (e.g. its behavior in an embedded clause). I will also show that some speakers allow forming an absolutive construction not only with a progressive form, but also with a resultative one, though in this case some additional restrictions seem to hold.

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