National Repository of Grey Literature 2 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
Vocabulary of Old Czech Translation of the Coronation Order of Charles IV.
Jamborová, Martina
The paper focuses on the Old Czech translation of the Coronation Order of Charles IV. The oldest surviving manuscript of the Czech translation of Charles's Coronation Order dates back to 1396 and seven other texts of the Czech translation from the 15th to the 16th centuries, contained in various manuscripts, have been preserved to this day. The paper describes the differences and changes of the Old Czech translation and appreciates the quality of the Old Czech version of this important work.
On Dictionary Transmissions
Černá, Alena M.
Daniel Adam of Veleslavin (1546-1599) is rightly considered the founder of the Czech lexicography. His work has been followed by subsequent generations and his Czech became the model for the period of the Czech National Revival. This paper pursues several metaphorical lexical units that Veleslavín first used in his dictionaries (especially in his Nomenclator quadrilinguis dictionary dating back to 1598): little-wolves = wind, kittens = catkins, wine molech = a drunkard, baker's soul = pores in a hunch of bread. These metaphors, which undoubtedly existed in the Humanist language, were taken over by more recent lexicographers and lexicographic works (from V. J. Rosa up to the Reference Dictionary of Czech Language), such a fact contributes to the understanding of the lexicographic method of the past periods. At the same time, the question arises as to whether these metaphors were actually used in spoken Czech, or they only appeared in the given dictionaries as a reflection of the lexicographical work of the influential Humanist scholar. In the analysis, we also describe the changes that affected the forms and meaning of the metaphors as well as, in some cases, do we describe even new lexical units that replaced or supplemented these metaphors.

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