Results 181 to 190 of about 135,121 (240)
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East Slavic

2000
Abstract In this final descriptive chapter we discuss the status of clitics in East Slavic (ESl). These include Russian (Rus), to which most of the chapter is devoted, and Belarusian (Br) and Ukrainian (Ukr), which we treat in less detail.
Steven Franks, Tracy Holloway King
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Slavic Soil

2023
This chapter details how ongoing material hardship, a winter famine from 1946 to 1947, and mounting pressures from new Soviet settlers and institutions in Moscow to rebuild led local Soviet leaders to initiate a campaign to expel the Germans from Kaliningrad.
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The Slavic Peoples:

2018
Hubertus F. Jahn examines Russia’s self-concept (Selbstbild ) and enemy-concept (Feindbild) through an analysis of the views expressed by individuals, interest groups, and mass media. Multiple sources including politicians’ private correspondence and several genres of art and culture are studied in order to determine Russian perceptions of themselves ...
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The Slavic trumpet

2017
The article contains description of the poem "The Slavic Trumpet".
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‘Slavic Unculturedness’:

This chapter deals with Hardbass as a specific style of electronic dance music and the exploration of migrant emotions among contemporary Eastern Europeans: both in migrant communities and host societies. Based on research in Prague and Vienna, this study of a diasporic musical form reveals how Hardbass is often accompanied by a specific street fashion
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West Slavic

2000
Abstract This chapter introduces the major clitic phenomena of the West Slavic (WSl) literary languages, which fall into three discrete groups. Here we survey the clitic systems of near neighbors Czech (Cz) and Slovak (Slk), the (east) Lekhitic language Polish (Pol) and, to complete the picture, the isolated pair of Upper Sorbian (USor ...
Steven Franks, Tracy Holloway King
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South Slavic

2000
Abstract The following SSI literary languages are treated in this book: Serbian/Croatian, Slovenian, Bulgarian, and Macedonian. Although these essentially form a dialect continuum, from Slovenian in the northwest to Bulgarian in the southeast, there is a major linguistic division between Slovenian (Sin) and Serbian/Croatian (SC), on the ...
Steven Franks, Tracy Holloway King
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Slavic canon

2008
staroslavenski kanon, tekstovi su iz X. i XI. st. koji vjerno prikazuju zagubljene originalne ćirilometodske prijevode liturgijskih knjiga iz IX. st.Nastanak svakog pojedinog teksta mogao se samo približno odrediti paleografskim a osobito jezičnim istraživanjem. Kanon staroslav. spisa nazvan je prema istoj grč.
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Ancient Slavic Medicine

Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, 1959
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