A specialist in Middle Eastern languages will likely be quick to associate Pol. mamuna ‘an ape-like mythological creature’ with Ar./Pers./Tkc. majmun ‘ape’. It is possible and indeed probable that this name is an Oriental borrowing applied to an ancient native belief, but a closer inspection reveals at least several other possibilities tangled in an ethnolinguistic web of potential conflations and contaminations. This paper presents the ethnographic background and some etymological ideas, though without as yet a definite answer
Etymological sketch presents 19 words, in the majority of all-Slavonic range. They are thematically ...
The paper deals with three cases of a Slavic theonym standing as substitute for an ancient mytholog...
<p><strong>SOME </strong><strong>LITHUANISMS </strong><strong>IN THE POLISH AND BYELORUSSIAN DIALECT...
A specialist in Middle Eastern languages will likely be quick to associate Pol. mamuna ‘an ape-like ...
<div>A specialist in Middle Eastern languages will likely be quick to associate Pol. mamuna ‘an ape-...
The paper discusses a mythical creature known in Polish folklore as kłobuk, how it got its name, the...
An addendum to Kamil Stachowski and Olaf Stachowski’s "Possibly Oriental Elements in Slavonic Folklo...
The article proves the hypothesis of the origin of the Russian colloquial word mazurik as deriving f...
The article deals with selected characters’ names in Ukrainian folktales derived from other language...
The article considers how the Komi-Permyak language masters Russian (mostly dialect) vocabulary and ...
Slavic *tъrgъ, Old Church Slavonic trъgъ. Their origin and distribution in postclassical times Slavi...
This article presents eighteen glosses and emendations borrowed from Turkic dialects into the Slavon...
Folk beliefs, which have their source in history, culture and geography, are among the most signific...
The article deals with the etymological analysis of the mythonyms Barstucke and Marcopole found in t...
The most successful term referring to vampires, namely the word ‘vampire’ itself, as is widely know...
Etymological sketch presents 19 words, in the majority of all-Slavonic range. They are thematically ...
The paper deals with three cases of a Slavic theonym standing as substitute for an ancient mytholog...
<p><strong>SOME </strong><strong>LITHUANISMS </strong><strong>IN THE POLISH AND BYELORUSSIAN DIALECT...
A specialist in Middle Eastern languages will likely be quick to associate Pol. mamuna ‘an ape-like ...
<div>A specialist in Middle Eastern languages will likely be quick to associate Pol. mamuna ‘an ape-...
The paper discusses a mythical creature known in Polish folklore as kłobuk, how it got its name, the...
An addendum to Kamil Stachowski and Olaf Stachowski’s "Possibly Oriental Elements in Slavonic Folklo...
The article proves the hypothesis of the origin of the Russian colloquial word mazurik as deriving f...
The article deals with selected characters’ names in Ukrainian folktales derived from other language...
The article considers how the Komi-Permyak language masters Russian (mostly dialect) vocabulary and ...
Slavic *tъrgъ, Old Church Slavonic trъgъ. Their origin and distribution in postclassical times Slavi...
This article presents eighteen glosses and emendations borrowed from Turkic dialects into the Slavon...
Folk beliefs, which have their source in history, culture and geography, are among the most signific...
The article deals with the etymological analysis of the mythonyms Barstucke and Marcopole found in t...
The most successful term referring to vampires, namely the word ‘vampire’ itself, as is widely know...
Etymological sketch presents 19 words, in the majority of all-Slavonic range. They are thematically ...
The paper deals with three cases of a Slavic theonym standing as substitute for an ancient mytholog...
<p><strong>SOME </strong><strong>LITHUANISMS </strong><strong>IN THE POLISH AND BYELORUSSIAN DIALECT...