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Acta onomastica
|
2010
|
vol. 51
|
issue 1
106-139
EN
Anoikonyms derived from personal names in onomastical and dialectological context (within the material of the Dictionary of Moravian and Silesian Anoikonyms) The paper deals with anoikonyms derived from personal names by a suffix (the structure types Bartos + -ka, Bartos + -ovka, Bartos + -ovec, Bartos + -ovice etc.). The first part of the paper presents their onomastic characteristics: it pays attention to their word-forming structure, motivation, frequency, eventually productivity of certain structure types; also information on their geographic distribution is added. Selectively also those anoikonyms are presented which are hard to explain. The second part compares the onymic maps (maps of some structure types) with dialect maps (especially the maps of the so called bundles of isoglosses contained in the Czech Linguistic Atlas). Mutual interconnections of the onymic and dialect areas are explored.
Acta onomastica
|
2010
|
vol. 51
|
issue 1
94-105
EN
On the Headword Construction in the Dictionary of Moravian and Silesian Anoikonyms The paper summarizes the hitherto results of the work on the Dictionary of Moravian and Silesian Anoikonyms (DMSA), explains the causes of the problems relating to the headword construction (the DMSA is a dictionary of entries, not of individual anoikonyms; Czech is a language featuring the homonymy of morphological characteristics of flexible words; the information leading to the construction of a ‘basic’ form of the headword is often missing) and presents a set of universal rules to construct headwords of the DMSA; one or another of these rules should be applicable for all anoikonyms or their collections which are ranged in individual entries. The process of headword construction engages a changing degree of abstraction depending on the make-up of the entries (one-name entries containing oneword anoikonyms or more-word ones; more-name entries; the structure type and grammatical, dialectal and other characteristics of listed anoikonyms).
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