partitive cases is its emergence under the scope of negation,™ which is semantically
related to the role of partitive as the marker of aspectual unboundedness in
Finnic. Adpositions, as pointed out by recent sources, differ in their ways of
combining with genitive or partitive noun phrases,® and there is much variation
especially in contact situations. Relativization® and clause combining® involves
partitives, for instance, in Estonian, where diachronically diverse non-finites®®
receive case but then develop further meanings as in many other languages.
Yet, discussions of relativization and non-finites could but do not reach the
topic of partitives. A discussion of word order is also necessarily related to
partitives, as partitive marked phrases have distinct distribution. Their parts
can be separated in syntax, and recent research has discovered new aspects
about their structure; partitive objects and subjects are placed differently with
regard to the verb in sentences.* Frequently, postverbal subjects appear in
existential sentences and are typically partitive, but such details are marginal
to discuss in chapters on existentials.” Also, a discussion of nominal predication
in Hungary 2022. https://btk.kre.hu/konf/parte/userfiles/5_PARTE_TALK_LURAGHI_
ALBONICO_Evidential%20functions%200f%20the%20partitive.pdf (Accessed 15 August
2023); Jeremy Bradley — Gerson Klumpp — Helle Metslang: TAM and Evidentials, in M. Bakré¬
Nagy — J. Laakso — E. Skribnik (eds.): The Oxford Guide to the Uralic Languages, Ist ed., United
Kingdom, Oxford University Press, 2022, 904-923. https://doi.org/10.1093/0s0/9780198767664.
003.0046
Matti Miestamo — Beata Wagner-Nagy — Anne Tamm: Negation in Uralic languages, Amsterdam,
John Benjamins, 2015; Matti Miestamo: Negation and Negatives, in M. Bakré-Nagy —J. Laakso
— E. Skribnik (eds.): The Oxford Guide to the Uralic Languages, Ist ed., United Kingdom,
Oxford University Press, 2022, 924-935. https://doi.org/10.1093/0s0/9780198767664.003.0047
Riho Grünthal: Adpositions and Adpositional Phrases, in M. Bakrö-Nagy - J. Laakso - E.
Skribnik (eds.): The Oxford Guide to the Uralic Languages, Ist ed., United Kingdom, Oxford
University Press, 2022, 961-969. https://doi.org/10.1093/050/9780198767664.003.0050
86 Shagal, Ksenia: Relative Clauses in Uralic, in D. Abondolo - R.-L. Valijärvi (eds.): The Uralic
Languages (Second edition), London, Routledge, 2023, 939-978. https://doi.org/10.4324/
9781315625096-21
Elena Skribnik: Clause Combining, in M. Bakrö-Nagy - J. Laakso - E. Skribnik Skribnik (eds.):
The Oxford Guide to the Uralic Languages, Ist ed., United Kingdom, Oxford University Press,
2022, 996-1017. https://doi.org/10.1093/050/9780198767664.003.0053
88 Jussi Ylikoski: Non-Finites, in M. Bakrö-Nagy - J. Laakso - E. Skribnik (eds.): The Oxford
Guide to the Uralic Languages, Ist ed., United Kingdom, Oxford University Press, 2022,
936-949. https://doi.org/10.1093/050/9780198767664.003.0048
8° Maria Vilkuna: Word Order, in M. Bakré-Nagy — J. Laakso - E. Skribnik (eds.): The Oxford
Guide to the Uralic Languages, Ist ed., United Kingdom, Oxford University Press, 2022,
950-960. https://doi.org/10.1093/0s0/9780198767664.003.0049; Norris, Mark: Nominal
structure in a language without articles: The case of Estonian. Glossa: a journal of general
linguistics, 3(1), 41 (2018). https://doi.org/10.5334/gjgl.384; Eva Dekäny — Marcel den Dikken:
Partitive case in Estonian, PARTE workshop 15-17 September 2022, Hungary Budapest, Käroli
Gäspär University ofthe Reformed Church in Hungary 2022; Tibor Laczkö: On Chisarik (2002)
Partitives in Hungarian: an LFG approach, PARTE workshop 15-17 September 2022, Hungary
Budapest, Käroli Gäspär University of the Reformed Church in Hungary 2022.
Johanna Laakso — Beata Wagner-Nagy: Existential, Locational, and Possessive Sentences, in
M. Bakr6é-Nagy — J. Laakso — E. Skribnik (eds.): The Oxford Guide to the Uralic Languages,