21 research outputs found
Poznámka k etymologii staroslověnského vъsǫdъ ‘svaté přijímání’ / Pripomba k etimologiji starocerkvenoslovanskega vъsǫdъ ‘sveto obhajilo’
This article reviews etymological explanations of Old Church Slavic vъsǫdъ ‘Holy Communion, Eucharist’. It argues in favor of the hypothesis that the word is an Early Romance loanword. The source was probably a Dalmato-Romance derivative of Late Latin usandum.Prispevek pregleduje dosedanje etimološke razlage starocerkvenoslovanskega vъsǫdъ ‘sveto obhajilo’. Argumentira se v prid hipoteze, da gre za zgodnjeromansko izposojenko. Najbolj verjetno izvira iz romanskega kontinuanta poznolatinskega usandum s področja Dalmacije
Poznámky k aktuálnosti vydané korespondence Václava Machka
V loňském roce byla péčí etymologického oddělení Ústavu pro jazyk český AV ČR vydána ve dvou svazcích obsáhlá korespondence etymologa, indoevropeisty a slavisty Václava Machka (1894-1965). Zahrnuje v podstatě celou Machkovu profesní dráhu, pochází z období mezi lety 1929 a 1965. Většina této doby je v Machkově životě nerozlučně spjata s Filozofickou fakultou Masarykovy univerzity. Machek se zde roku 1931 habilitoval, působil tu pak nejprve jako soukromý docent, od roku 1936 jako mimořádný profesor a od roku 1945 až do své smrti jako profesor řádný, a to v oboru indoevropský srovnávací jazykozpyt. V letech 1952-1954 na fakultě zastával také funkci proděkana pro vědecký výzkum
Doplňky k bibliografii pražské typologie
This text supplements the Bibliography of Prague School Typological Theory, which contained entries up to 2006 and was published in the same year. After a brief reminder of the main principles and the most important representatives of this approach, there follows a list of works published after 2006 and those that appeared during that year, or previously, but were not included in the original Bibliography. The present inventory is divided into four parts, according to authorship: works written by Vladimír Skalička, by Petr Sgall, by Jaroslav Popela, and by other authors
Старочешское anděl ‘ангел’: заимствование из старославянского языка или из латыни?
The aim of this paper is to discuss the existing theories of the origin of the Old Czech word anděl ‘angel’, whose -ď- may be explained as reflecting influence from Old Church Slavonic анг҄елъ, containing a palatalised sound, or from Medieval Latin angelus [anjelus]. New supporting arguments in favour of the latter view are presented, and, in particular, further evidence of Old Czech [ď] in place of earlier [j], the possible secondary influence of antonymous Old Czech diábel/ďábel ‘devil’ in the modification of original Old Czech anjel to anděl, and the form of words for ‘angel’ in other West and western South Slavonic languages. Also considered is the possibility that the origin of anděl is to be found in a spoken Early Romance dialect. DOI: 10.31168/2305-6754.2021.10.2.1Цель статьи — обсудить существующие гипотезы относительно происхождения старочешского слова anděl ‘ангел’: -ď- в этом слове можно объяснить как отражение влияния либо старославянского анг҄елъ, содержащего палатализованный согласный, либо среднелатинского angelus [anjelus]. В статье приведены новые аргументы в пользу второго толкования, а именно иные случаи появления старочешского [ď] на месте более раннего [j], возможное вторичное влияние старочешского антонима diábel/ďábel ‘дьявол’ на изменение первоначального старочешского anjel в anděl и форма слов со значением ‘ангел’ в других западнославянских и в западных южнославянских языках. Обсуждается также возможность возведения старочешского anděl к устному раннероманскому диалекту. DOI: 10.31168/2305-6754.2021.10.2.
A note on prehistoric language contact or What Slavic studies can learn from Uralic studies
In the paper, the author summarizes a recent theory on the role of language contact in the formation of the Uralic protolanguage. Then he shows how the knowledge of the course of events in Uralic studies could be useful for Slavic studies in considering the analoguous topic
On the etymology of Common Slavonic *žid7
In the paper, Common Slavonic word for the meaning "Jew" is etymologized as a loanword of Romance origin
The Sound Substitutions in Old Romanisms in Slavonic Languages
The paper deals with sound substitutions in old romanisms in Slavonic languages
Greenbergian and Prague School typology or the chances lying ahead
The paper deals with the relationship between the Prague School typology and Greenbergian typology. Various similarities and differences of the theories are discussed