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Slavica Slovaca
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2011
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vol. 46
|
issue 1
36 - 39
EN
Up to now, the etymology of Common-Slavonic *sъtъ ‘honeycomb’ is not explained sufficiently and it remains uncertain. The author of the paper discusses various existing explanations of the word, and proposes a new solution according to which the word belongs to the originally onomatopoeic root *sъp- ‘to hum, to drone’. This root is only a variant of a larger onomatopoeic set of forms that served to express different secondary meanings of the original meaning ‘to gasp, to pant, to breathe loudly, hard’ (*sop-, *sap-, *sip-, *sěp-, *sup-).
Slavica Slovaca
|
2005
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vol. 40
|
issue 1
63-67
EN
The paper introduces a two-volume publication entitled 'Slavonic Onomastics. Encyclopedia' (SOE), written by a collective of authors and released in Poland (2002-2003). SOE includes editor's preface by E. Rzetelska-Feleszko, introductory chapter by R. Srámek, 24 'hyperchapters' (entries) and supplements. Each entry is composed of 12 chapters devoted to onomastics and onymy in Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Russian Federation, Ukraine, Belarus, Bulgaria, Macedonia, Serbia, Croatia, Slovenia; attention is paid to onymy of the Slavs in Germany, too. SOE contains parts that discuss various onomastic issues (history, theory, terminology, etymology, anthroponymy, toponymy, chrematonymy, language contacts etc.). SOE is predominantly based on a comparative background and represents a first synthetic description of proper names in slavonic linguistics.
EN
The relationship between language and culture is related to the naming of various objects, phenomena and attitudes that are part of the daily life of a person and society. Language is the source of the anthropological knowledge of this relationship, while it itself reflects the development processes of society from the past to the present. The article provides an insight into the issue of research into Slavic cultural and spiritual thought, which Bulgarian, Polish, Russian, Serbian and Slovak Slavists discussed at the interdisciplinary Slavistics conference entitled „Interdisciplinary research of sources on language and spiritual culture – Slovak-Slavic connections“ (September 21–23, 2022) as a part of the international project cooperation.
Slavia Orientalis
|
2008
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vol. 57
|
issue 1
97-105
EN
The article discusses the theme of religious beliefs of pagan Slavs in pronouncements at the international congresses and scientific conferences in the 20th and at the beginning of the 21st century. The sources, which it is based on, include, the post-conference volumes, the summary books, published after subsequent conferences, and bibliographies. In particular, the publications connected with the International Congresses of Slavists as well as the conferences especially devoted to the Slavonic paganism, have been taken into account. The purpose of the article is discussing and summing up the period of research, whose intensive development brought the substantial progress in discovering the Slavonic spiritual culture.
Slavica Slovaca
|
2010
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vol. 45
|
issue 2
99-104
EN
Slovak Slavistics accepted the interdisciplinary approach of research based on the examination of language, literature, history, culture, ethnical and confessional processes. The elementary feature of Slovak Slavistics, from the scholarly and investigatory point of view, is the research of Slovak - Slavic and Slovak - non-Slavic relations. Although the domestic and international Slavistics undergoes the recession today, its task to accelerate systematic and complex exploration remains untouched. The priority of Slovak Slavistics, both in domestic and international context, is to safeguard the scholarly outputs and their presentation in the international competition. Important role plays the provision of the continuity of Slavistic research, which is not merely the question of prestige, but the elementary approach towards continuous quality enhancement of the scholarly discipline, too. The internationally accepted Slavistic research with an active cooperation of the 'Jan Stanislav' Slavistic institute of the SAS, acknowledges the topicality, exigency, non-substitutability, and continuity of the modern Slavistics in Slovakia, which constitutes an inseparable part of wider Central European and international Slavistic research.
Slavica Slovaca
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2020
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vol. 55
|
issue 1
3 - 14
EN
Slovak Slavistics is the inseparable part of the international Slavistically oriented research milieu. The ‘Jan Stanislav’ Institute of Slavistics of the SAS contributes significantly to this research. Since its foundation in 1995, the Institute dedicates already twenty-five years’ activity to interdisciplinary research of relations of the Slovak language and culture with other Slavic and non-Slavic languages and cultures in both the national and international cooperation. The present study dedicated to 25th anniversary of the foundation of this Institute points especially to the topical coherences, trends, and needs of the institutionalized Slavistic research contextualized with inevitable processes in the scene of the academic science policy in Slovakia. Despite all the intricate factors of the current scholarly research in the humanities, Slovak Slavistic research represents the scholarly and research area, which brings new findings in various contexts of cultural development of Slovakia. The core research comprises the Old Church Slavonic, Latin, Slovak-German, Slovak – east Slovakian and Slovak – south Slavic relations, including the area of the translation of the Biblical texts to Slovak, as well as the research area of linguistic – cultural and historical coherences of the development of the inter-confessional communication.
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