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Dive into the research topics where Prashant Pardeshi is active.

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Featured researches published by Prashant Pardeshi.


Lingua Posnaniensis | 2013

Prenominal Participial Phrases in Marathi, the Noun Phrase Accessibility Hierarchy, and Picture Nouns

Peter Edwin Hook; Prashant Pardeshi

Abstract An introduction to Keenan and Comrie’s NPAH (noun phrase accessibility hierarchy) is followed by data showing to what extent Marathi’s PPP s (prenominal participial phrases) do and do not conform to it. The range of constructional variety inside a PPP is shown to be related to the tightness or looseness of the relation of the predicate inside the PPP to the nulled element. Examples are presented of the puzzling absence of Agent and Experiencer noun phrases inside PPP s. The paper ends with examples and discussion of the mismatch or transfer of PPP modifiers away from the NP denoting the ‘imagee’ or entity depicted in an image to the NP denoting the image itself.


Linguistics | 2012

Semantic neutrality in complex predicates: Evidence from East and South Asia

Peter Edwin Hook; Prashant Pardeshi; Hsin-Hsin Liang

Abstract This investigation of crosslinguistic patterns in lexicon-grammar interaction looks at complex predicate data from four Asian languages (Mandarin Chinese, Hindi-Urdu, Japanese, Marathi). In these languages verbs whose basic meanings are HIT and EAT are used as operators in complex predicates: e.g., Mandarin dǎ yíge quántóu {HIT a fist} ‘give a punch’ versus chī yíge quántóu {EAT a fist} ‘take a punch’ or Hindi-Urdu raub mār- {awe HIT} ‘intimidate’ versus raub khā- {awe EAT} ‘be intimidated’. We show that in Chinese, Hindi-Urdu, and Marathi the normal antonymy of paired CPs featuring these two operators disappears if the CPs themselves alternate with the monolexical heads of intransitive clauses provided those clauses are unaccusative.


Gengo kenkyū | 2006

Toward a geotypology of EAT-expressions in languages of Asia: Visualizing areal patterns through WALS

Prashant Pardeshi; Peter Edwin Hook; Colin P. Masica; Hajar Babai Shinji Ido; Kaoru Horie; Jambalsuren Dorjkhand; Joungmin Kim; Kanako Mori; Dileep Chandralal; Omkar N. Koul; Hsin-Hsin Liang; Yutaro Murakami; Kingkarn Thepkanjana; Qing-Mei Li; Prasad Vasireddi; Terry Varma


Pragmatics and beyond. New series | 2006

Overt anaphoric expressions, empathy, and the uchi-soto distinction : A contrastive perspective

Kaoru Horie; Miya Shimura; Prashant Pardeshi


世界の日本語教育 | 2002

Responsible Japanese vs. "Intentional" Indic: A Cognitive Contrast of Non-intentional Events

Prashant Pardeshi


神戸言語学論叢 = Kobe papers in linguistics | 1998

A Contrastive Study of Benefactive Constructions in Japanese and Marathi

Prashant Pardeshi


Archive | 2017

Noun-modifying constructions in Marathi

Peter Edwin Hook; Prashant Pardeshi


Archive | 2015

Blowing hot, hotter, and hotter yet: Temperature vocabulary in Marathi

Prashant Pardeshi; Peter Edwin Hook


Archive | 2009

The semantic evolution of 'eat'-expressions: Ways and byways

Peter Edwin Hook; Prashant Pardeshi


Archive | 2009

A Taxonomy of EAT Expressions in Marathi

Peter Edwin Hook; Prashant Pardeshi

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