Results 21 to 30 of about 2,320 (145)
Vowel lengthening in Juraj Križanić’s subdialect in comparison with Čakavian and Kajkavian data
The article discusses neo-circumflex, neo-acute and pre-resonant vowel lengthenings in Juraj Križanić’s “Čakavian-Kajkavian” subdialect, as evidenced by his writings.
M. Oslon, M. Kapović
semanticscholar +1 more source
Remnants of Serbo-Croatian Lexis in Present-day Croatian [PDF]
This article deals with the process of language purism and the presence of Serbisms in Croatian. We attempt to show whether the speakers of Croatian know and use specific lexical items that are generally considered to be more characteristic of Serbian
Lečić, D.
core +3 more sources
The multifaceted lexis of Kerstner’s Gruntovčani
A particular community is, among other things, also determined by its speech (Pon 2009), and the most conspicuous indicator of the distinctiveness of a given speech, as well as an important linguistic means of national integration and differentiation, is
Josip Lasić +2 more
doaj +1 more source
This article analyzes phrasemes with a German constituent in the dialect of the town of Križevci, collected during dialectology field research. Although Germanisms have been exhaustively investigated in standard and substandard Croatian, perhaps even ...
K. Puškar
semanticscholar +1 more source
From the Syntax of Complex Sentences in the Oldest Kajkavian Literary Texts: Causative Sentences
The Croatian Kajkavian literary language is characterised by particular syntactic characteristics in complex sentences that are comparable throughout the entire period from the 16th to the 19th century, or which differ between the earliest literary texts
Željka Brlobaš
semanticscholar +1 more source
Iz fonologije govora Zadobarja: čakavsko-kajkavske interference na zahodnem karlovškem področju Prispevek obravnava nekaj fonoloških značilnosti Zadobarja, ki jih je avtorica ugotovila na osnovi terenskega raziskovanja.
M. Marinković
semanticscholar +1 more source
The dative in Croatian Štokavian and Kajkavian grammars up to 1860
This article deals with the approach to the dative case in Kajkavian and Štokavian grammars from 1604 to 1859. We concentrate on seventeen grammars, primarily focusing on their presentation of the meaning of the dative case.
M. Horvat, Ljiljana Šarić
semanticscholar +1 more source
Is Kajkavian still spoken in Checea, Romania? [PDF]
Hrvatsku manjinu u rumunjskom dijelu Banata čine tri etničke skupine: karaševski Hrvati naseljeni uglavnom u sedam sela u županiji Caraş-Severin, sa središtem u Karaševu (Caraşova), zatim Šokci u Rekašu (Recaş) te skupina Hrvata kajkavaca, doseljenih iz Turopolja, u Keči (Checea, Checea Croată). Najbrojnija je i svakako najbolje istražena prva, skupina
Radosavljević, Petar +2 more
openaire
The honorific third person plural in Slavic [PDF]
Although much has been written about polite forms of address in Slavic, the grammatical expression of respect for a person that does not take part in the conversation has hitherto received little to no attention.
Houtzagers, Peter
core +2 more sources
Issues in Balto-Slavic accentology [PDF]
After the very well-organized Leiden conference for which we must be grateful to Tijmen Pronk, it seems appropriate for me to review some of the papers, as I did after the previous conferences in Zagreb and Copenhagen. The aim of this review is merely to
Kortlandt, Frederik H. H.
core

