Results 81 to 90 of about 2,017 (205)
Mouse in Saami and Related Problems [PDF]
The article discusses Saami terms for “mouse” (e.g. Northern Saami “sáhpán”, Inari Saami “säplig”, Pite Saami “saahpìek”), explaining them as a common heritage of Uralic origin. It is suggested that the related words are to be found in Selkup Samoyed and
Krzysztof Tomasz Witczak
doaj +1 more source
ELDIA – a Finno-Ugric minority research project approaching its goal
ELDIA (European Language Diversity for All) was set out to investigate the state and conditions of language diversity in Europe by way of diverse Finno-Ugric minorities from Norway to Slovenia. The idea was to utilise the existing research infrastructure
Laakso, Johanna
core +1 more source
‘(Ne) Khukhry-Mukhry’: One Russian Idiom of Mongolian Origin Revisited
The paper examines the etymology of the idiom ‘(ne) khukhry-mukhry’ which in its form fully corresponds to the so-called pair words widely used in Turkic, Mongolic and some Finno-Ugric languages.
Alexey A. Burykin
doaj +1 more source
Les langues finno-ougriennes dans la révolution médiatique du « Web 2.0 » [PDF]
La révolution médiatique d’Internet, et plus particulièrement du « Web 2.0 » dans les années 2000, a entamé une modification radicale des moyens de communication entre les citoyens du monde.
Cagnoli, Sébastien
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The present article gives an overview of the borrowed vocabulary of the Rus- sian dialect of the Kola peninsula, which mostly comes from Finno-Ugric languages.
David Pineda
doaj +1 more source
Low-resource Finno-Ugric Neural Machine Translation through Cross-lingual Transfer Learning
First high-quality machine translation models were mainly focusing on large languages, such as English and German. Thankfully, the trend has been growing toward helping languages with fewer resources.
Tars, Maali
core
Typological Database of the Volga Area Finno-Ugric Languages (VolgaTyp)
<p><a href="https://volgatyp.elte.hu/">volgatyp.elte.hu</a></p> <p>This database aims to present typological properties of the Mari, Udmurt and Komi-Permyak languages, similarly to its antecedent, the “Typological ...
Havas, Ferenc +4 more
core +1 more source
THE TIT NAMES IN SLAVIC AND FINNO-UGRIC LANGUAGES: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
The article presents bookish and dialect tit names in Slavic and Finno-Ugric languages. The Slavic and Finno-Ugric ornithonyms denoting the genus Parus on the whole or the great tit (Parus major L.) were taken as material for analysis. In total, data from 12 Slavic and 14 Finno-Ugric languages and their dialects were analyzed.
openaire +2 more sources
Heurs et malheurs des langues finno-ougriennes de Russie [PDF]
Dans cet essai, l’auteur exprime quelques idées sur les processus externes et internes en cours dans les langues finno-ougriennes de Russie en ce début de xxe siècle.
Arzamazov, Aleksej
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As a part of the “parade of sovereignties” during the disintegration of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, the national republics of Russia designated both Russian and local languages as their state languages.
Zamyatin, Konsta, Zamyatin, Konstantin
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