Bohemica Olomucensia, 2014 (roč. 6), číslo 1


Studie

Prague & The Sense of Presence

Andrew Lass

Bohemica Olomucensia 2014, 6(1):7-17 | DOI: 10.5507/bo.2014.001

Language economy and the pro-drop theory from a minimalist perspective

Erika Corbara

Bohemica Olomucensia 2014, 6(1):18-35 | DOI: 10.5507/bo.2014.002

This paper aims at a new reconsideration of the pro-drop theory, focusing on the properties and requirements of language economy principles, whose satisfaction constitutes the central point of the Minimalist program (MP). Starting and fundamental approach of the research is the consideration of the language faculty as a biological system of the human being: The pro-drop languages (PDL) and their syntactic and semantic features will be thus investigated from a strongly minimalist point of view in order to find a clearer and cross-linguistic explanation of the pro-drop phenomenon.

Projevy sekundární orality v psaných komunikátech (nejen) na internetu

Expressions of secondary orality in written texts (not only) on the internet

Martin Janečka

Bohemica Olomucensia 2014, 6(1):36-44 | DOI: 10.5507/bo.2014.003

I tried to sum up concisely and perhaps sufficiently for the purposes of this text, how the human society was developing in the ability of recording, categorizing, saving and transmitting information in different ages, what influence can history of these processes have on formation and state of the present-day culture. In other words - how the attributes of the primary (oral) culture were transmitted through the chirographic and typographic culture to the contemporary (visual) culture, which is legitimately called the secondary orality. I tried to transpose the theoretic-historical considerations into discussions about the relation between spoken and...

Morfematika mluvené a psané češtiny

Morphematics of spoken and written Czech

Ondřej Bláha

Bohemica Olomucensia 2014, 6(1):45-56 | DOI: 10.5507/bo.2014.004

Focusing on morphematics, the author analyses two samples that represent the contemporary spoken Czech on the one hand and the contemporary written Czech on the other hand. He shows the main differences between these two existential modes of language. The different distribution of word classes in spoken and written language causes the most marked differences in morphematics. The various claims to precision and explicitness of the spoken and written communication cause rather less differences in morphematics. Both samples show that in the Czech language still dominates the inflection as a typological principle.

Recenze a zprávy

Světy, ve kterých žijeme

THE WORLDS IN WHICH WE LIVE

Soňa Šinclová

Bohemica Olomucensia 2014, 6(1):59-61

Slovník českých jazykovědců v oboru bohemistiky a slavistiky

GLOSSARY OF CZECH LINGUISTS IN THE CZECH STUDIES AND SLAVONIC STUDIES

Lukáš F. Peluněk

Bohemica Olomucensia 2014, 6(1):62-64

Jsme v češtině doma?

ARE WE HOME IN CZECH LANGUAGE?

Kristýna Šťastná

Bohemica Olomucensia 2014, 6(1):65-66

Čeština pro život

CZECH LANGUAGE FOR LIFE

Markéta Jargusová

Bohemica Olomucensia 2014, 6(1):67-69

Pětaosmdesátiny Miroslava Grepla

85. BIRTHDAY OF MIROSLAV GREPL

Petr Malčík

Bohemica Olomucensia 2014, 6(1):70-71

Na cestě k moderní mluvnici češtiny

TOWARDS A MODERN CZECH GRAMMAR

Darina Hradilová

Bohemica Olomucensia 2014, 6(1):72-73