Results 1 to 10 of about 54,936 (262)
Trends in population-based cancer survival in Slovenia
The aim of our study was to describe the survival of Slovenian cancer patients diagnosed in the last twenty years. An insight is given into the improvement made in different cancer types, population groups and prognostic factors.
Zadnik Vesna +5 more
doaj +1 more source
Presenting and Linking Grammatical Data on the Franček Educational Language Portal
This article presents how grammatical data are treated and presented in the first specialized lexicographic and grammatical learning e-tool for Slovenian, the Franček portal, and how these data are linked across the portal’s dictionary, advisory, and ...
Nina Ledinek +2 more
doaj +1 more source
In bilingual Austrian Carinthia, visible changes have taken place in recent decades; for example, applications for bilingual programs have increased, and the Slovenian ethnic community includes residents in areas where it previously did not have any ...
Tina Lengar Verovnik
doaj +1 more source
A comparison of the beginnings of exonym standardization in Croatian and Slovenian
This paper compares the beginnings of exonym standardization and some characteristics of the oldest exonyms in two similar Slavic languages, Croatian and Slovenian. It uses the comparative and exemplar methods.
Ivana Crljenko, Matjaž Geršič
doaj +1 more source
Koštiál’s Slovenski etimološki besednjak (Slovenian Etymological Dictionary)
The papers of Ivan Koštiál (1877–1949), kept by the manuscript department of the National and University Library in Ljubljana, also includes the material titled Slovenski etimološki besednjak (Slovenian Etymological Dictionary), which has been preserved ...
Metka Furlan
doaj +1 more source
The borrowed suffix ‑i(j)ada in established and potential Slovenian derived vocabulary
This article uses FidaPLUS corpus material to present nominal derivations with the borrowed suffix ‑iada, which preserves its original spelling in Slovenian, is orthographically adapted to ‑ijada, or is shortened and simplified to ‑jada or ‑ada.
Ines Voršič
doaj +1 more source
Slovenian exonyms in North America
The number of Slovenian exonyms around the world decreases with distance from Slovenia. This applies less so to North America, where their density is twice as high as in South and Central America.
Drago Perko, Drago Kladnik
doaj +1 more source
Slovenian vodkinja ‘female leader’
Standard Slovenian has a need for a feminine equivalent of the masculine noun vodja ‘leader’. After examining attempts to establish such a word or to simply use the masculine form for the feminine designation, the author suggests the form vodkinja, which
Peter Weiss
doaj +1 more source
Izmail Sreznevsky and Slovenian
The Slovenian language played an important role in the history of Russian- Slovenian scholarly contact. The unique linguistic material of Slovenian attracted the research of important nineteenth-century Russian linguists.
Irina Makarova Tominec
doaj +1 more source
This article concludes that Bezlaj’s rather critical review (1964) of Hildegard Striedter-Temps’ lexicographic volume Deutsche Lehnwörter im Slovenischen (German Loanwords in Slovenian, 1963) was excessive because this book has become an important ...
Metka Furlan
doaj +1 more source

