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Slovak among Slavic languages (the question of Slovak - South Slavic lexical correspondences)
Kraml, Jan ; Nábělková, Mira (advisor) ; Mucsková, Gabriela (referee)
BA thesis "Slovak amongst Slavonic Languages (On the Question of Slovak - South Slavonic lexical correspondences)" deals with correspondences between Slovak as West Slavonic language and South Slavonic languages. In the first part, opinions about the origin of Slovak are summarized (Theories about homogenous or heterogeneous origin of Slovak and the migration-integration theory), which introduce specifics of central Slovak, which is the basis for standard Slovak, and put them into context with Non-West-Slavonic languages. Then an overview of studies dedicated to issues of Slovak - South Slavonic lexical correspondences, which is less researched than phonetic-morphologic correspondences, follows. The main part of the thesis is the analysis of material from Slavonic language atlas (OLA), which is an important project of Slavonic linguistic geography focused on Slavonic dialectal differentiation. The aim of this thesis was to show the range and character of Slovak - South Slavic language equivalence on the material of the 9th volume of OLA, which focuses on thematic area of Man. Apart from research motivation emerging from Slovak Studies and General Slavonic Studies, the thesis also touches the issues of Czech-Slovak language contact; Slovak - South Slavic parallels, which do not have equivalents in...
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Slovak among Slavic languages (the question of Slovak - South Slavic lexical correspondences)
Kraml, Jan ; Nábělková, Mira (advisor) ; Mucsková, Gabriela (referee)
BA thesis "Slovak amongst Slavonic Languages (On the Question of Slovak - South Slavonic lexical correspondences)" deals with correspondences between Slovak as West Slavonic language and South Slavonic languages. In the first part, opinions about the origin of Slovak are summarized (Theories about homogenous or heterogeneous origin of Slovak and the migration-integration theory), which introduce specifics of central Slovak, which is the basis for standard Slovak, and put them into context with Non-West-Slavonic languages. Then an overview of studies dedicated to issues of Slovak - South Slavonic lexical correspondences, which is less researched than phonetic-morphologic correspondences, follows. The main part of the thesis is the analysis of material from Slavonic language atlas (OLA), which is an important project of Slavonic linguistic geography focused on Slavonic dialectal differentiation. The aim of this thesis was to show the range and character of Slovak - South Slavic language equivalence on the material of the 9th volume of OLA, which focuses on thematic area of Man. Apart from research motivation emerging from Slovak Studies and General Slavonic Studies, the thesis also touches the issues of Czech-Slovak language contact; Slovak - South Slavic parallels, which do not have equivalents in...
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Participation of the Czech dialectology in the project of the Slavic linguistic atlas
Ireinová, Martina
The Slavic Linguistic Atlas belongs to the most significant projects of the Slavic linguistics. It is extraordinarily important not only for linguistics, but also for a range of other scientific branches (e.g. history, ethnology, culturology, religionistics). The idea of the all-Slavic atlas originated as early as in 1929 and started to come into existence at the break of the 50th and 60th of the 20th century. One of the founders of the Slavic Linguistic Atlas was also the Czech linguist Bohuslav Havránek. Of the Czech dialectologists, J. Bělič, S. Utěšený, A. Vašek, K. Fic, J. Vojtová, and others have taken a notable share in the creation of this geolinguistic work. At present, the Czech National Committee processes the volume Reflections of *tort, *tolt, *tert, *telt of the fonetic-grammatical series.
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Terms for the lastborn child in a family
Janyšková, Ilona
The article presents an overview of the semantic motivations for naming the youngest child in Slavonic languages. The rich dialectal material from individual Slavonic languages shows that in the past (and in some places even today) the lastborn child in a family had a special standing, both in a positive sense and also the negative.
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