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         Slavic:     more books (100)
  1. Morphosyntax in Slavic by Catherine V. Chvany, 1980-02
  2. The Slavic Literatures by Richard Casimir Lewanski, 1965-06
  3. Global International & Slavic Libraries Directory
  4. Beyond Sovereignty: From Status Law to Transnational Citizenship? (21st Century COE Program Slavic Eurasian Studies, 9)
  5. Folk dance music of the Slavic nations by Hanns Aldo Schimmerling, 1951
  6. Albanian and South Slavic Oral Epic Poetry (American Folklore Society Memoirs) by Stavro Skendi, 1954-06
  7. Folk dance music of the Slavic nations by Hanns Aldo Schimmerling, 1951
  8. Albanian and South Slavic Oral Epic Poetry (American Folklore Society Memoirs) by Stavro Skendi, 1954-06
  9. Slavic Languages: A Condensed survey by Roman Jakobson, 1966-01-01
  10. The Formation of the Slavonic Literary Languages (Ucla Slavic Studies) by Gerald Stone, 1985-05
  11. Aspects of the Slavic Middle Ages and Slavic Renaissance Culture (American University Studies. Series XII, Slavic Languages and Literature, Vol. 4) by Henrik Birnbaum, 1992-06
  12. Slavic: Webster's Timeline History, 375 - 2007 by Icon Group International, 2009-07-08
  13. A Feminist's Semiotic Odyssey Through Czech Literature (Slavic Studies) by Bronislava Volkova, 1997-09
  14. Cognitive Paths into the Slavic Domain (Cognitive Linguistic Research) by Divjak, Dagmar, 2007-12-14

121. Frederik Kortlandt: Slavic Accentuation
Electronic version of a 1974 monograph by Frederik Kortlandt concerning the history of the slavic accentuation system.
http://www.kortlandt.nl/publications/sa/
Frederik Kortlandt: Other electronic publications
SLAVIC ACCENTUATION
A Study in Relative Chronology
Lisse / Netherlands
The Peter de Ridder Press
Title, Dedication, Table of Contents
[56 kB]
Introduction
[233 kB] Chapter 1. The l -participle [664 kB]
Chapter 2. Slovene
konj [368 kB]
Chapter 3. The loss of the IE laryngeals
[1.047 kB]
Chapter 4. The adjective
[155 kB]
Chapter 5. Case endings
[629 kB]
Appendix A
[911 kB]
Appendix B
[172 kB]
Appendix C
[368 kB] Appendix D [38 kB] Appendix E [144 kB] List of references [148 kB] Glossary [216 kB] Top of page Home last modified: 9 October, 2002

122. Behind The Name: Slavic Mythology Names
The names listed here occur in the mythologies and legends of the slavic peoples. BYELOBOG m slavic Mythology Means the white god from slavic byelo
http://www.behindthename.com/nmc/sla-myth.html
t h e e t y m o l o g y a n d h i s t o r y o f f i r s t n a m e s Slavic Mythology Names The names listed here occur in the mythologies and legends of the Slavic peoples. BYELOBOG m Slavic Mythology
Means "the white god" from Slavic byelo "white" and bog "god"... [more] CHERNOBOG m Slavic Mythology
Means "the black god" from Slavic cherno "black" and bog "god"... [more] DAZBOG m Slavic Mythology
Variant of DAZHDBOG DAZHDBOG m Slavic Mythology
Possibly means "the giving god" in Slavic... [more] MOKOSH f Slavic Mythology
Derived from Slavic mok meaning "wet, moist"... [more] MORANA f Slavic Mythology
Means "death" in Slavic... [more] PERUN m Slavic Mythology
Means "thunder" in Slavic... [more] STRIBOG m Slavic Mythology
Possibly means "flowing god" in Slavic... [more] SVAROG m Slavic Mythology
Means "sun god" in Slavic... [more] VOLOS m Slavic Mythology
Derived from Slavic volu meaning "ox"... [more] Home Names by Usage Contact Information

123. Our Slavic Language
History of the Old Slavonic language.
http://www.carpatho-rusyn.org/spirit/chap4.htm
Our Slavic Language The language used by our people in the Liturgy is called Church - or Old-Slavonic . It is called Church- Slavonic , since its use is limited to the Church for the liturgical services. It is also called Old-Slavonic, since in former times it was the common language of Slavic tribes. Some Slavists refer to it as the " Old-Bulgarian " language, but incorrectly. The Slavonic language was introduced into the Byzantine liturgy by the Apostles of the Slavs, SS. Cyril and Methodius, during their missionary activity in Great Moravia. The missionary brothers were sons of a high ranking officer (Gr. " drungarious ") Leo, who was attached to the governor of the Macedonian province. During the eighth century this whole province became occupied by the Slavic tribes. Thus SS. Cyril and Methodius were familiar with the Slavic dialect as spoken at that time in Macedonia. Constantine, known mostly by his religious name Cyril, was one of the finest linguists in the whole Empire. Commanding a sufficient knowledge of the Slavic dialect of Macedonia, he created the first Slavic alphabet, called '' Glagolitic " (Sl. "

124. SULAIR: Slavic And East European Collections At Stanford University Libraries
Selected FullText Electronic Periodicals for slavic, East European and slavic and East European Journal via JSTOR (1957-1999) Access Stanford-only.
http://www-sul.stanford.edu/depts/hasrg/slavic/1slavic.html
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Slavic and Eastern European Studies
Karen Rondestvedt, Curator; rondest@stanford.edu
Collections
Selected Full-Text Electronic Periodicals for Slavic, East European and Eurasian Studies

125. Connecticut College - Slavic Studies
Chair's letter plus information on faculty, academics, events and students.
http://camel2.conncoll.edu/academics/departments/slavicstudies/

Slavic Studies

Home
Faculty Major ...
requirements
Courses
Catalog

Web-based

Interdisciplinary

Studies
... Links
Slavic Studies
Several features set Slavic Studies apart from other Humanities departments at Connecticut College. Our academic program is interdisciplinary in its design: the Slavic Studies major encompasses courses not only language and literature, but also linguistics, history, philosophy and film studies. At the same time, we encourage our students to propose alternate paths to completing major requirements in order to meet their academic potential and interests. In Slavic Studies we teach not only Russian, but also Czech, Croatian and Polish as Individual Study courses. We currently have students in three Slavic languages. In order to provide a broad range of courses in Slavic Studies, the Department draws on its diverse faculty: Eva Eckert chairs Slavic Studies and teaches courses in Russian, Czech and linguistics. Andrea Lanoux teaches Russian literature and film in both Russian and English, in addition to Polish language. Marijan Despalatovic teaches Russian literary masterpieces as well as intellectual history, semiotics of film, Marxism and Croatian language. Sofi Pais, a native speaker of Russian, teaches advanced-level courses in Russian language and literature. Charles Arndt, a Dostoevsky scholar and recent graduate of Brown University, teaches elementary and intermediate Russian language.

126. Canadian Association Of Slavists
An organization of teachers and scholars in the field of slavic and related studies in Canada.
http://www.utoronto.ca/slavic/cas/

127. Uniqueness In The Heart Of Europe - Glagolitic Script
Historical and political background around the invention of the slavic alphabet.
http://www.thezaurus.com/sloveniana/glagolitic_script.htm
Select the Article Architectural Heritage Beehive Panels Carantania Cobbler's Lamp Dalmatin's Bible Dormouse Easter Eggs Freising Manuscripts Glagolitic script Hrastovlje: Goddess worship Hrastovlje: Gothic monument Hayracks Joze Plecnik, the Architect Joze Plecnik in Vienna Joze Plecnik in Prague Joze Plecnik in Ljubljana Karst Shepherd Kurenti Lace of Idrija Lipizzaner Mithraism in Slovenia Oldest Whistle in Europe Potica Proteus Anginus Ptuj, the Oldest Slovenian City Sheaf Shepherd Sundial Skis of Bloke Sticna Abbey Valvasor's Duchy of Carniola Valvasor on glagolitic Venetic Ancestry of Slovenians Venetic Art Venetic Culture Venetic Script 400 Year Old Vine in Maribor Glagolitic Script (glagolica) and the Slavs

128. Slovo - Slavic Text Processing And Typography
How to set up your PC for slavic and Cyrillic languages.
http://www.slovo.info/
Attention: this page is not being maintained any longer, the information given on this page is probably out of date, and links may not work Anzeige: bong shisha wasserpfeifen rauchbedarf
Anzeige: mz simson tuning ersatzteile
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Eta stranitsa po-russki E-Mail
Slovo
This site tells you how to make your PC write in Slavic, Cyrillic and East Central European languages.
Please note that some information is available in German language only.
Table of Contents
Click the language symbol after every subject to go to the appropriate page.
Basics
Modern Slavic languages in Windows 3.1 and 3.11 Modern Slavic languages in Windows 95, 98 and NT Modern Slavic languages in Linux Modern Slavic languages on Apple Macintosh computers
Software
Overview on East European codepages and links to free fonts for Windows 3.1 Free Unicode fonts for Windows 95/98 and NT that contain Cyrillic and East European characters. Also for use in Linux. Useful tools and utilities for multilanguage text processing Information on XSerif font family Macros for Microsoft Word for Windows for multilingual text processing and transliteration See also the section Commercial software vendors at our link page
Special interest
Old Church Slavonic and Old Russian Transliteration of Cyrillic text Accented Cyrillic characters
Theoretical remarks
What are charsets, codepages, what is Unicode?

129. Department Of Germanic And Slavic Languages
Information about the department and classes offered.
http://germslav.byu.edu/

130. Slavic Languages & Literatures (University Of Michigan)
cultural and intellectual history, interdisciplinary studies, Polish literature, Czech literature, slavic linguistics, and slavic film.
http://www.lsa.umich.edu/slavic/
About Undergraduates Graduates Michigan Slavic Publications The Department offers courses on Russian poetry and prose, Old Russian literature, 18th-century Russian literature, 19th-century Russian literature, 20th-century Russian literature, literary theory (Formalism, Structuralism, semiotics, reception theory, and cultural studies), cultural and intellectual history, interdisciplinary studies, Polish literature, Czech literature, Slavic linguistics, and Slavic film. Interested in the Russian language? History? Literature? Learn more about our Russian program. Our students place very well in graduate programs and are competitive in professional schools... ( more more
Site Design:
3040 Modern Languages Building
812 East Washington
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1275
P: 734.764.5355 F: 734.647.2127 slavic@umich.edu

131. Slavic Department Language Programs
Offers both a major and a minor in Finnish, with study of the Finnish language and culture, literature, and history as well as FinnishCanadian language and culture.
http://www.utoronto.ca/slavic/language/finnish.html
Language Programs Croatian Estonian Finnish Hungarian ...
Go to list of Finnish courses
A nation of five million people, Finland is situated between West and East, between Sweden and Russia, sharing for thousands of years religious, historical, political, social, and cultural influences and experiences with its neighbours and the different worlds they represent. Finnish studies at the University of Toronto are presently engaged in teaching the Finnish language - a three-year sequence together with a linguistics course, to be introduced later, that will be of interest to all students of language - and in offering other courses on the literature and culture of Finland. Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures
121 St. Joseph Street, Alumni Hall (AH), Rm. 429 ~ Toronto, Ontario ~ M5S 1J4
tel: fax: email

132. Slavic Soul Party!
Brash and strong as slivovitz,equal parts fire and funk, slavic Soul Party! has forged a new brass band culture from the heart of Brooklyn, melding Gypsy,
http://www.slavicsoulparty.com/
15 songs! 12 musicians! 10 dollars! 4 roosters! 1 crazy MC! Order it using your credit card or PayPal account:
Brash and strong as slivovitz,equal parts fire and funk, Slavic Soul Party! has forged a new brass band culture from the heart of Brooklyn, melding Gypsy, East European, Mexican, and Asian immigrant backgrounds with American jazz , groove, and soul. One of the hardest working bands in NYC, SSP! averages over 100 shows per year, including performances in the US, the Balkans, and Turkey.
Damn! Bet you want to hear that, right?
Online Press Kit
Every Tuesday at Barbes in Brooklyn, forever...
except August 2005.
M ore about SSP!
E-mail: info at slavicsoulparty.com
SSP! is Shane Endsley and Ben Holmes (trumpet), Oscar Noriega (clarinet), Jacob Garchik and Brian Drye (trombone), Ron Caswell (tuba), Peter Stan (accordion), Take Toriyama and Matt Moran (snare/bubanj/darabouka).

133. SLAVIC STUDIES
Annual publication devoted to slavic and Central European studies (mostly history, politics, literature) issued by the slavic Research Center at Hokkaido University in Japan. Full versions of the articles (in Japanese) are available in pdf files. Detailed abstracts in English online.
http://src-h.slav.hokudai.ac.jp/publictn/slavic-studies/slavicstu-e.html
May.2004 SLAVIC
STUDIES
No.52
Contents

(PDF format ( including English/Russian Summary) Contributors
- PDF format ( including English/Russian Summary Back Numbers
(contents only) Only English/Russian Summary Publisher : Slavic Research Center, Hokkaido Univ.
Contact : mika@slav.hokudai.ac.jp
SRC Home
Japanese
English Acta Slavica Iaponica
Proceedings of Symposia
...
List of All Publications

134. A Routledge Journal: The Journal Of Slavic Military Studies
The Journal of slavic Military Studies (until 1993 The Journal of Soviet Military Studies) investigates all aspects of military affairs in the slavic
http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/titles/13518046.asp
Contact Us Members of the Group All Products Books Journal Article eBooks Alphabetical Listing Journals by Subject New Journals Advertising ... eBooks
The Journal of Slavic Military Studies Editors: David M Glantz , Carlisle, Pennsylvania, USA
Christopher Donnelly , NATO HQ, Brussels, Belgium Editorial Information Publication Details:
Volume 18, 2005, Quarterly
ISSN Print 1351-8046 ISSN Online 1556-3006 2005 Subscription Rates
Subscribe Online!

Institutional: US$435/£284
Individual: US$84/£57
of CrossRef

Aims and Scope: The Journal of Slavic Military Studies (until 1993 The Journal of Soviet Military Studies ) investigates all aspects of military affairs in the Slavic nations of central and eastern Europe in historical and geopolitical context and offers a vehicle for central and eastern European security and military analysts to air their views. Its unique international editorial board and diverse content including translations of newly released Soviet and Russian documents as well as specialist book reviews make the journal a must for academics, military figures and civilians alike who are interested in this region's security and military affairs. Abstracting Information: Abstracted/indexed in: Political Science Abstracts, International Political Cience Abstracts, Historical Abstracts and America: History and Life, The Lancaster Index to Defence, International Security Literature, International Bibliography of the Social Sciences, and Periodicals Content Index among others.

135. Slavic Department Language Programs
Courses in Hungarian language, literature and cinema.
http://www.utoronto.ca/slavic/language/hungarian.html
Language Programs Croatian Estonian Finnish Hungarian Macedonian Polish Russian Serbian ...
Go to list of Hungarian Courses
Hungarian is spoken by ten and a half million inhabitants of present-day Hungary, about three million people in the neighbouring countries, and perhaps as many as an additional two million around the world. These figures make Hungarian, which is related to Finnish, Estonian, and Lappish, but virtually no other language in Europe, by far the largest minority language in a vast sea of Indo-European speakers. Hungarian studies at the University of Toronto are concerned with the language, literature, and culture of Hungary and with the international role of the country, including the particular problem of Hungarian immigration to Canada. Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures
121 St. Joseph Street, Alumni Hall (AH), Rm. 429 ~ Toronto, Ontario ~ M5S 1J4

136. H-EarlySlavic Discussion Network
HNet discussion group dedicated to slavic history, literature, and culture before 1725. Features subject overview, archive and subscription information.
http://www.h-net.org/~ess/
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    H-EarlySlavic
    H-EarlySlavic is a forum for the discussion of Slavic history, literature, and culture before 1725. It is focused primarily on East Slavic (Russian, Ukrainian, Belorussian) regions, though West and South Slavic areas will also be considered. H-EarlySlavic is a scholarly list: it is aimed at professional scholars and their students. The languages of the list are Belorussian, English, French, German, Russian, and Ukrainian. Chess Chess Nevskii, Lake Chud, and the ice / Chess new volume on Ivan Mazepa ... Riuirkids
    Social Sciences Online Send comments and questions to H-EarlySlavic Editors
  • 137. The Christian Science Monitor | Csmonitor.com
    A Christian Science Monitor article about the Sorbs.
    http://www.csmonitor.com/durable/1999/12/02/fp8s2-csm.shtml
    WORLD USA COMMENTARY LEARNING ... Text Edition Search: Special Offer: Subscribe to the Monitor and get 32 issues FREE!
    Archive Packages

    Collections of articles on specific topics.
    Most-viewed stories:
    (for 09/06/05)
    In New Orleans, not everyone wants to be rescued

    Katrina resettling Gulf Coast

    For Bush, a test of political skill

    On Rue Dauphin, the fall and rise of law and order
    ...
    California says 'no' to junk-food sales in schools

    WORLD from the December 02, 1999 edition Editor's note The Christian Science Monitor archive includes stories dating back to 1980. Some early articles lack sufficient formatting, and will appear as one long column without paragraph breaks. We apologize for the aesthetics and hope that the information will still be of value to you. A tiny minority fights extinction Omar Sacirbey, Special to The Christian Science Monitor CROSTWITZ, GERMANY - The dancers skitter to the zesty music and the crowd of young and old, packed in a barnyard, loves every minute. It is not only music and merriment filling the air, but Sorbian, a language spoken by the world's smallest Slavic minority. Other barnyards in Crostwitz, population 640, reveal similar scenes during the village's third annual folklore festival.

    138. Szwede Slavic Books
    Importer and distributor of slavic books including books in Russian, Czech, and Polish.
    http://www.szwedeslavicbooks.com/cgi/index.pl?op=go&file=home

    139. Double Slavic-Bulgar Words And Expressions
    Features of the old (Turkic) Bulgar language that have been preserved in the modern (slavic) language.
    http://members.tripod.com/~Groznijat/b_lang/bl_double.html
    setAdGroup('67.18.104.18'); var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "tripod.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded" Search: Lycos Tripod Free Games Share This Page Report Abuse Edit your Site ... Next The language of the Asparukh and Kuber Bulgars, Vocabulary and grammar Features of the old Bulgar language, preserved in the modern Bulgarian language The Bulgar inscriptions discovered in the last decades reveal to us that some of the most characteristic features of the modern Bulgarian have their origin in the old Bulgar language. Two of the most frequent verb forms in modern Bulgarian – ' E ' ('he/she/it IS') and ' BE ' ('he/she/it WAS') coincide with the old Bulgar ones. Similarly, the post-word definitive articles, which set modern Bulgarian apart from the rest of the Slavic languages, have their analogies in the lands to the east, previously inhabited by Bulgars. The diminutive suffixes - CHO CHE CA CHA ), which are today common to the Bulgarian names (Trajcho, Trajche, Vancho, Vanche, Vancha, etc.), are also a Bulgar legacy. All this shows that the old Bulgar played a significant part in the formation of the modern Bulgarian language. That is why even nowadays there are preserved a number of 'double' expressions, one word of which is Slavic, and the other – Bulgar in origin. For example: the expression

    140. Association For Women In Slavic Studies (AWSS)
    Association for Women in slavic Studies (AWSS) Center at the University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign, and the Association for Women in slavic Studies
    http://www.awsshome.org/
    Association for Women in Slavic Studies (AWSS)
    Upcoming Events
    The Russian, East European, and Eurasian Center at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, and the Association for Women in Slavic Studies Present
    2005 Ralph and Ruth Fisher Forum International Conference
    Commodity, Consumer, Entrepreneur? Women and the Marketplace
    Friday, 24 June – Saturday, 25 June 2005
    University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
    Keynote Address
    Nadia Adzhgikhina , Russian Union of Journalists, Moscow State University
    "Women's Place in the Market Space: 20 Years after Perestroika" Friday, June 24 @ 5:30pm For complete program see: http://www.reec.uiuc.edu/events/fisher.html Free and open to the public. Registration not required.

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