@inproceedings{derzhanski-siruk-2024-verbal,
title = "The Verbal Category of Conditionality in {B}ulgarian and its {U}krainian Correspondences",
author = "Derzhanski, Ivan and
Siruk, Olena",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference on Computational Linguistics in Bulgaria (CLIB 2024)",
month = sep,
year = "2024",
address = "Sofia, Bulgaria",
publisher = "Department of Computational Linguistics, Institute for Bulgarian Language, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences",
url = "https://aclanthology.org/2024.clib-1.19",
pages = "187--195",
abstract = "Modern Bulgarian shares a conditional mood with the other Slavic languages, but it also has developed a future-in-the-past tense which is structurally analogous to many Western European languages{'} category traditionally called a conditional mood in their grammars. The distinction between these two forms is sometimes elusive and can be difficult for native speakers of Slavic languages who are learning Bulgarian. In this paper we consider the uses of the Bulgarian conditional mood and future-in-the-past tense in a parallel corpus of Bulgarian and Ukrainian text, examining the corresponding wording in Ukrainian, where the conditional mood is supplemented by modal verbs, and discuss the breadth of choices open to translators when working in each direction.",
}
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%0 Conference Proceedings
%T The Verbal Category of Conditionality in Bulgarian and its Ukrainian Correspondences
%A Derzhanski, Ivan
%A Siruk, Olena
%S Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference on Computational Linguistics in Bulgaria (CLIB 2024)
%D 2024
%8 September
%I Department of Computational Linguistics, Institute for Bulgarian Language, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences
%C Sofia, Bulgaria
%F derzhanski-siruk-2024-verbal
%X Modern Bulgarian shares a conditional mood with the other Slavic languages, but it also has developed a future-in-the-past tense which is structurally analogous to many Western European languages’ category traditionally called a conditional mood in their grammars. The distinction between these two forms is sometimes elusive and can be difficult for native speakers of Slavic languages who are learning Bulgarian. In this paper we consider the uses of the Bulgarian conditional mood and future-in-the-past tense in a parallel corpus of Bulgarian and Ukrainian text, examining the corresponding wording in Ukrainian, where the conditional mood is supplemented by modal verbs, and discuss the breadth of choices open to translators when working in each direction.
%U https://aclanthology.org/2024.clib-1.19
%P 187-195
Markdown (Informal)
[The Verbal Category of Conditionality in Bulgarian and its Ukrainian Correspondences](https://aclanthology.org/2024.clib-1.19) (Derzhanski & Siruk, CLIB 2024)
ACL