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EN
The author's main aim was to present new problems or inconsistencies emerging in the spelling of acronyms. This is important since acronyms constitute a part of the Hungarian word stock that is undergoing changes at the fastest rate today. Deficiencies in the 11th edition of the Rules of Hungarian Orthography have been clearly pointed out by this empirical study, suggesting furthermore that phenomena diverging from the orthographical norms have to be traced back to some serious reason(s). A deeper understanding of those reasons could be based on an even more extensive study. One thing is certain: in creating the 12th edition of the rule book, tendencies occurring in the everyday practice of writing ought to be taken into consideration, and gaps in the regulations have to be filled in, in accordance with the general logic of Hungarian orthography.
EN
This paper discusses certain phenomena, features, and signs of power or hierarchical roles in writing, writing habits, and especially in spelling (including the regulation of orthography and its everyday practice in offices as well as in popular contexts). The overall framework is anthropo- and socio-semantic, and the material investigated is based on concrete observations, especially data drawn from Hungarian sources. The major manifestations, mechanisms, and signs of power discussed here include the following: belief in the magic power of writing, choice of type of writing, regulation of orthography (spelling reform, language reform), nostalgic romanticism, degradation, ways of catching readers' attention, discrimination, and counter-cultural forms of expression.
Slavica Slovaca
|
2021
|
vol. 56
|
issue 3
409 - 419
EN
In the article, two trends in the history of Russian bookwork are traced in the material of manuscripts of the 13th – 15th centuries. One trend is related to the preservation of book traditions of the 11th – 13th centuries and a reference to the works of Old Russian writers of the preceding period. Anthologies of Old Russian original and translated works are being compiled. Manuscript scribes show great interest in the works of Cyril of Turov and Metropolitan Hilarion. The crisis generates new phenomena in church life: an Early Russian redaction of the Kormchaya appears. Local needs were taken into account in the creation of the new legal code of rules and articles. The second issue discussed in the article is related to the manifestations of the second South Slavic influence in Russian bookishness. It notes the coexistence of two spelling norms – early Old Russian and the new Middle Bulgarian (Tărnovsky).The choice of this norm depended largely on the redaction of the rewritten text.
EN
The article discusses the formation, collocations, meanings, and spelling of ordinal numbers derived from numbers which are rational but not whole, namely from n a pul (n and a half). The analysis is based primarily on corpus data and partly on internet research.
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