Full-text resources of CEJSH and other databases are now available in the new Library of Science.
Visit https://bibliotekanauki.pl

Results found: 7

first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last

Search results

Search:
in the keywords:  NAME
help Sort By:

help Limit search:
first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last
EN
There exists a big diversity in the inhabitant names formation (formation of names denoting persons according to their place of abode) in Slovak language.Rules of the inhabitant names formation are based on a number of criterions, influences and restrictions on multifarious levels. The paper should help users of Slovak language and give them orientation in this complex issue. The author offers simplified overview of the system creation of inhabitant names nd relational adjectives in Slovak language summarized in three basic models applicable to the absolute majority of cases.
EN
This paper examines the history of official and private topographic, administrative and statistic lexicons and surveys of townships covering the area of present-day Slovakia from the earliest such works produced in the Kingdom of Hungary to those published after the formation of Czechoslovakia. Their value and use for historical and demographic research is evaluated and compared with the first official township lexicon published between the two world wars.
Slavica Slovaca
|
2020
|
vol. 55
|
issue 1
53 - 63
EN
This study focuses on the history of the names of the residents of Sumy in the context of its appearance and subsequent settlement. The analysis of atoikonyms is based on the testimonies of written monuments and other materials of the pre-Soviet period.
EN
In the submitted contribution, the authors focus on the archaeological sites from the Migration and the Avar Khaganate periods. They are in conflict with the current territorial and administrative division of the Slovak Republic. The authors submitted the register of sites in an alphabetical order, which are either incorrect localized, or are listed under wrong names in the literature, respectively the name of a village has changed. Solution proposal: to record both names, i. e. current valid data as first and data known from literature as second.
EN
When writing certain types of proper names, some ambiguities that can be caused by several linguistic or non-linguistic factors occur in linguistic practice. Ambiguity can appear in the words and phrases, in which the boundaries between proper names and appellatives blur, and without the mastery of general knowledge about the object it is impossible to reliably determine whether it refers to a proper name or an object in general. Similarly, it is not always clear, whether the phenomenon is to be treated as a special event, or a general event, and whether descriptive names are proper names or not. In our language, however, it is likely to encounter with such proper names, the form of which is currently orthographically difficult to be rationalized. In addition to the above-mentioned issues, orthographic ambiguity, however, may also cause perceiving of some words in the language as proper names while other words in lexical stock with an analogous function are perceived as appellatives.
Slavica Slovaca
|
2016
|
vol. 51
|
issue 1
33 - 43
EN
The paper examines the correlation between name and reality in the history of culture and science. It provides the characteristics of contemporary philosophical, natural scientific, physical and mathematical as well as linguistic approaches to this problematics. It also mentions the specific role personal name plays in both ontological and sociocultural perspectives. The paper introduces the topological model of the structure of the word together with its main features. The resulting topological model of the name is unfolded into the matrix of the Absolute. The core axioms of the model of the word are formulated, and “The Matrix of the Absolute” project is proposed.
EN
The article presents the names of Jews from Poznan, excerpted from the published in print six municipal documents from the 16th-18th centuries. The author makes an attempt to outline a specific character of the names of the Jewish residents of Poznan against the background of the already recognised nomenclature of this ethnic group living in the eastern borderlands. The repertoire of the names of Poznan Jews presented in the documents may contribute to further studies and comparative research. The set of 87 names, reconstructed during the analysis, constitutes nearly 24% of the repertoire of male names used by Polish Jews which were included in Rothwand's register from 1866 and nearly 15% of all Jewish names ('correct and flawed') contained in the list from 1928. The varieties of names found in Poznan sources (more than 150 items) give - as the author emphasizes - only a fragmentary image of the abundance of forms which were then used. The description and onomastic analysis are preceded by remarks referring to the origin of this particular ethnic group in Poznan and its traditions connected with names.
first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last
JavaScript is turned off in your web browser. Turn it on to take full advantage of this site, then refresh the page.