Results 11 to 20 of about 8,236 (205)
The Roar of Euphonious Speech by Ven. Lubsan-Rinchen Nomtoev Revisited
Introduction. The article describes a treatise titled The Roar of Euphonious Speech by renown 19th-century Buryat Buddhist cleric and educator Ven. Lubsan-Rinchen Nomtoev. The text examined is a xylograph printed at the Atsagat Datsan. Goals. The article
Tsymzhit P. Vanchikova +1 more
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A Translation and Study of the Mongolian Khan’s Edicts in the Goryeosa (1270-1280)
The Goryeosa is the principal source of official Korean history (정사. 正史) critical to studying that period of history and including data on politics, economy, society, culture, and biographies of public figures of the Goryeo Dynasty.
Boldbaatar Ariunbaigali
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Europe: So Many Languages, So Many Cultures [PDF]
The number of different languages in Europe by far exceeds the number of countries. All European countries have national languages, and in nearly all of them there are minority languages as well, whereas all major languages have dialects.
Steinhauer, H. (Hein)
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USING THE TWO-LEVEL MORPHOLOGY ON MODERN MONGOLIAN LINGUISTICS
This study compiles primarily the word structure of Modern Mongolian language and further more focused on the possibilities of description of Mongolian language in PC KIMMO, a two level processing method of morphological parsing.
Uuganbaatar D +3 more
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On the Study of Mongolian Script Lexicography
In this article, the history of lexicography of Mongolian linguistics, including the lexicography of Mongolian writing, is discussed. Mongolian linguistics has a rich history of lexicography, including the study of dictionaries based on knowledge of the Mongolian Cyrillic alphabet for Mongolian language learners since the 1990s.
openaire +1 more source
Revisiting G. S. Lytkin’s Catalogue of Manuscripts Used by Faithful Oirats
Introduction. Oirat-language (Clear Script) sources have been cataloguized by A. G. Sazykin, V. L. Uspensky, N. S. Yakhontova, K. V. Orlova, D. N. Muzraeva, and others. The Mongolian Collection of the Gorky Scientific Library at St. Petersburg University
Aisa O. Doleeva
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Introduction. In 1958, the Mongolian Academy of Sciences launched the “Monumenta Historica” series, which was to become the main venue of modern historical science in Mongolia for over fifty years of research in the field.
Tsolmon Sodnom +1 more
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Turkic Elements in the Floral Vocabulary of the Kalmyk Language
On the material of the Kalmyk language with reference to the Khalkha Mongolian, the Buryat languages and old Mongolian script, the article considers a thematic group of floral vocabulary to identify the Turkic-Mongolian parallels.
V. V. Kukanova, V. M. Trofimov
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KOREAN HANGUL AND MONGOLIAN SQUARE SCRIPT
Korean is the official language in the Republic of Korea and the DPRK, where it is called Hangul and Chosongyl respectively. For a long time, Koreans had used a complex system of Khancha before in 1444 King Sejon the Great created the Korean alphabet, but Khanch remains an important element in the life of Koreans to these days.
Vladimir N. Mushaev +2 more
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Scans for signatures of selection in Russian cattle breed genomes reveal new candidate genes for environmental adaptation and acclimation [PDF]
Domestication and selective breeding has resulted in over 1000 extant cattle breeds. Many of these breeds do not excel in important traits but are adapted to local environments.
A Talenti +108 more
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