The Common Slavic name for horse *koń', with a probably older, yet geographically more limited variant *komoń', has so far no generally accepted etymology. Given the great importance of this animal in the prehistory and the early history of the Indo-European and other peoples of Eurasia, this sets a problem not only for linguists, but also for historians and archeologists. The PIE word for horse, *ekuos, attested among all other branches of IE linguistic family, originally must have been common to the Slavs, as it was to their Baltic, Iranian and German neighbors, but at a later moment - which is hard to determine precisely, although we can assign it to a time before the disintegration of Slavic linguistic unity around the middle of the fir...
Common Slavic words *rěč', *slovo and *besěda all came to express, in different Slavic languages, th...
The Proto-Slavic etyma *dъska, *misa, and *bļudo (*bļudъ), which are semantically related, are gener...
Nations living next to each other are never totally isolated – we can observe cultural influences be...
The Common Slavic name for horse *koń', with a probably older, yet geographically more limited varia...
The article discusses the etymology of the Proto-Slavic word *jarьmъ, *jarьmo, which denotes a yoke ...
Abstract The Hungarian words komor ‘gloomy’ and komoly ‘serious’ are of unknown origin. The presen...
<p>The article contains three etudes on Slavic etymology. Word-formative and semantic aspects are th...
In the Etymological Dictionary of Slavic Languages (ESSJa 19: 24f.)O.N. Trubaéev reconstructs a Com...
This paper presents the first attempt at explaining Russian hippologic names. In the study, the auth...
The history of the Slavic word for ‘morning’ constitutes an old problem of Slavic etymology. Forms s...
In Old Polish texts as well as in later works written in the Old Polish style (e.g. in the Trilogy b...
The article is dedicated to the geographical spread and the historical development of Proto-Slavic *...
Slavic *tъrgъ, Old Church Slavonic trъgъ. Their origin and distribution in postclassical times Slavi...
The article investigates the Kashubian rite of the beheaded kite and the Prussian departed dead-offi...
The present paper is devoted to the old and always vexing problem of the linguistical ethnogenesis o...
Common Slavic words *rěč', *slovo and *besěda all came to express, in different Slavic languages, th...
The Proto-Slavic etyma *dъska, *misa, and *bļudo (*bļudъ), which are semantically related, are gener...
Nations living next to each other are never totally isolated – we can observe cultural influences be...
The Common Slavic name for horse *koń', with a probably older, yet geographically more limited varia...
The article discusses the etymology of the Proto-Slavic word *jarьmъ, *jarьmo, which denotes a yoke ...
Abstract The Hungarian words komor ‘gloomy’ and komoly ‘serious’ are of unknown origin. The presen...
<p>The article contains three etudes on Slavic etymology. Word-formative and semantic aspects are th...
In the Etymological Dictionary of Slavic Languages (ESSJa 19: 24f.)O.N. Trubaéev reconstructs a Com...
This paper presents the first attempt at explaining Russian hippologic names. In the study, the auth...
The history of the Slavic word for ‘morning’ constitutes an old problem of Slavic etymology. Forms s...
In Old Polish texts as well as in later works written in the Old Polish style (e.g. in the Trilogy b...
The article is dedicated to the geographical spread and the historical development of Proto-Slavic *...
Slavic *tъrgъ, Old Church Slavonic trъgъ. Their origin and distribution in postclassical times Slavi...
The article investigates the Kashubian rite of the beheaded kite and the Prussian departed dead-offi...
The present paper is devoted to the old and always vexing problem of the linguistical ethnogenesis o...
Common Slavic words *rěč', *slovo and *besěda all came to express, in different Slavic languages, th...
The Proto-Slavic etyma *dъska, *misa, and *bļudo (*bļudъ), which are semantically related, are gener...
Nations living next to each other are never totally isolated – we can observe cultural influences be...