Results 81 to 90 of about 56,380 (250)

The Slavic Thunder God in Eastern Slavic and Polish Phraseological Units [PDF]

open access: yesJunge Slavistik im Dialog
Ziel des Beitrags ist es, die phraseologischen Einheiten zum slawischen Donnergott in polnischer, weißrussischer, ukrainischer und russischer Sprache zu analysieren. Diese phraseologischen Einheiten erscheinen als wichtiger Indikator für die Entwicklung des mythologischen Gottesbildes von einem der mächtigsten slawischen Götter
openaire   +2 more sources

Utopia Remembers: The Soviet Past in the Imagined Communist Future

open access: yesThe Russian Review, EarlyView.
Abstract After a twenty‐five‐year hiatus, the reappearance of utopian literature in 1957 prompted Soviet literary watchdogs to corral the subgenre into an ideologically‐acceptable mold. A key requirement was for future generations to be depicted as reverently commemorating the past.
Antony Kalashnikov
wiley   +1 more source

West Slavic accentuation

open access: yes, 2010
At the time of the earliest reconstructible dialectal divergences, which belong to the Late Middle Slavic period of my chronology (stages 7.0 - 8.0 of Kortlandt 1989a, 2003, 2008), the West Slavic languages represented the most conservative part of the ...
Kortlandt, Frederik H. H.
core  

The Frontiersmen as an Object of Czech Nationalism 1918–1935

open access: yesStudies in Ethnicity and Nationalism, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT This study investigates the phenomenon of the frontiersmen, that is, the Czech minority border communities, as a part of the discourse of the Czech nationalist movement. Via the example of the Czechoslovak National Democracy party, it traces the frontiersmen on two levels.
Dominik Šípoš
wiley   +1 more source

Cross‐Linguistic Transfer of Phonological Awareness and Reading Skills in Russian–Uzbek Bilingual Children

open access: yesJournal of Research in Reading, Volume 49, Issue 3, August 2026.
ABSTRACT Background Bilingualism and biliteracy impact the development of phonological awareness and reading. However, existing research is Indo‐European‐centric, limiting our understanding of reading development in diverse linguistic environments. Method Addressing this gap, this study examined the relation between phonological awareness and reading ...
Shakhlo Nematova   +4 more
wiley   +1 more source

The lexical interface: closed class items in south Slavic and English [PDF]

open access: yes, 1998
This thesis argues for a minimalist theory of dual lexicalization. It presents a unified analysis of South Slavic and English auxiliaries and accounts for the distribution of South Slavic clitic clusters.
Caink, Andrew David
core  

Cross‐Linguistic Variations in Word‐Final Position: The Parametric Hierarchies, Connections and Networks

open access: yesStudia Linguistica, Volume 80, Issue 2, August 2026.
ABSTRACT Word‐final position is widely recognized as a structurally weak and restricted domain, yet languages differ strikingly in how they regulate segments and clusters at the right edge. While some systems categorically prohibit final consonants, others allow only a subset of segments, and still others impose process‐based adjustments such as final ...
Semra Baturay Meral
wiley   +1 more source

Rise and development of Slavic accentual paradigms

open access: yes, 2010
It appears that the complexity of Slavic historical accentology is prohibitive for most non-specialists in the field. It may therefore be useful to approach the subject from a number of different angles in order to render it more accessible to a wider ...
Kortlandt, Frederik H. H.
core  

Balto-Slavic Accentology, Schools of

open access: yes, 2017
The prosodic system of Proto-Slavic (Accent Systems, Suprasegmental Phonetics and Phonology). is reconstructed characterized with stress pattern (or accentual mobility), distinctive tones and vowel quantities.
Yamazaki, Yoko,
core   +1 more source

Church Slavic, Recensions of

open access: yes, 2020
In connection with a brief outline of the history of Church Slavic itself, the present article gives an overview of the different recensions of Church Slavic (the Middle Bulgarian, Serbian, Croatian, Russian, Czech and Romanian recensions). Church Slavic
Bounatirou, Elias Moncef
core   +1 more source

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