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Journal

2023 | 58 | 2 | 421 - 435

Article title

MIESTO RUSÍNČINY V RODINE SLOVANSKÝCH JAZYKOV

Content

Title variants

EN
The place of Ruthenian language in the family of Slavonic languages

Languages of publication

SK

Abstracts

EN
During last four decades, a new group of Slavonic languages was formed in Slavistics: Standard Slavonic Languages. This term was introduced into Slavonic language science by a Russian Slavonist A. Duličenko and it is used to mark languages of ethnic minorities, which were codified at the end of the last century and at the beginning of this century after socio-political changes in Central, Southern and Eastern Europe and after following disintegration of federated state formations into national languages, within which new minority languages were formed. We consider as Standard Slavonic micro-languages those ones, which have the status of standard languages and which were used in education, literature, theatre, media and ecclesiastical spheres. The oldest Slavonic micro-language is Vojvodine Ruthenianas a language of Vojvodian Ruthenians in Vojvodine in Serbia (1974). On the second place, there is (Carpathian) Ruthenian as a standard language of the Ruthenians in Carpatian region: in Slovakia (1995), in Poland (2009), in Carpathian Ukraine [there was not yet officially declared status of standard language) and in Hungary (revitalisation is going on)], Kabushian language in Poland (2005), Bosnian language (1995), Montenegro language (2007). In western Poland, in region of Upper Silesia so called (Upper) Silesian „etnolekt“ is being formed, which is used as communication means in common communication, in literature and in some printed media. Commission also deals with the research problem of these Standard Slavonic micro-languages for language contacts at the International committee of Slavonists, which organizes international congresses of Slavists every five years.

Journal

Year

Volume

58

Issue

2

Pages

421 - 435

Physical description

Contributors

  • Prešovská univerzita v Prešove, Centrum jazykov a kultúr národnostných menšín, Ústav rusínskeho jazyka a kultúry, Ul. 17. novembra 15, 080 01 Prešov, Slovak Republic

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.cejsh-5633280f-694a-4ebb-be83-991fb152859a
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