Аманжолов Глагольное управление в языке древнетюркских памятников 1969 Old Turki

Amanzholov, A. S. Verb Government in the Language of Old Turkic Monuments (Glagol'noe upravlenie v yazyke drevnetyurkskikh pamyatnikov), 1969. In Russian.

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Аманжолов Глагольное управление в языке древнетюркских памятников 1969 Old Turki
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Amanzholov, A. S. Verb Government in the Language of Old Turkic Monuments (Glagol'noe upravlenie v yazyke drevnetyurkskikh pamyatnikov), 1969. In Russian.

$40.00

Аманжолов А. С. Глагольное управление в языке древнетюркских памятников. / Отв. ред. В. М. Наделяев.
Москва : Наука, Главная редакция восточной литературы, 1969.
104 с. Мягкая издательская обложка, обычный формат. Тираж 2000 экз.
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Amanzholov, A. S. Verb Government in the Language of Old Turkic Monuments (Glagol'noe upravlenie v yazyke drevnetyurkskikh pamyatnikov). / Edited by V. M. Nadelyaev.
Moscow : Nauka, Main Editorial Office of Oriental Literature, 1969.
104 pp. Softcover, standard format. Print run: 2,000 copies.

This 1969 monograph is a foundational work in Turkic linguistics, authored by the eminent scholar Altai Sarsenovich Amanzholov (1934–2012). Published by the "Nauka" house during a flourishing period of Soviet Oriental studies, the book provides a meticulous analysis of the syntactic structures found in the earliest written records of the Turkic peoples. Amanzholov, a leading expert on ancient runic scripts, focuses here on the complex mechanics of verb government—the way verbs dictate the grammatical cases of their dependents.
The primary source material for this study includes the famous Orkhon-Yenisei inscriptions (the monuments of Kul Tigin, Bilge Qaghan, and Tonyukuk). Amanzholov examines how these 8th-century texts utilize case endings to express subtle logical and spatial relationships, offering a window into the highly developed grammatical system of the First Turkic Khaganate. By cataloging the patterns of government, the author reveals the continuity and evolution of syntactic norms from Old Turkic to the modern Turkic languages of Central Asia and Siberia.
Beyond its descriptive value, the work addresses broader questions of historical syntax and the development of the Altaic language family. Amanzholov’s research was instrumental in refining the methodology for deciphering and interpreting runic inscriptions, moving beyond mere translation to a structural understanding of the language. The book reflects the high scholarly standards of the Soviet school of Turkology, represented by the rigorous editing of V. M. Nadelyaev.
With a limited print run of 2,000 copies, this edition has become a sought-after reference for Turkologists, historical linguists, and scholars of Central Asian history. It is an essential acquisition for any academic library focusing on the philology of ancient steppe civilizations, documenting the linguistic roots of a heritage that spans from the Altai Mountains to the Mediterranean.

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