Baltų substratas rytų slavų kalbose

Although many archeological and onomastic publications demonstrate the existence of a Baltic substratum over a rather large section of the territory of the Eastern and Western Slavs, some Slavic studies scholars still ignore the influence exerted by this substratum in the evolution of the vocabulary...

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Published in:Baltistica
Main Author: Laučiūtė, Jūratė Sofija
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Lithuanian
English
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ku.oai.elaba.lt/documents/2439906.pdf
http://ku.lvb.lt/KU:ELABAPDB2439906&prefLang=en_US
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spelling ftlithuaniansrc:oai:elaba:2439906 2023-05-15T17:46:05+02:00 Baltų substratas rytų slavų kalbose The Baltic substratum in the languages of the Eastern Slavs Laučiūtė, Jūratė Sofija 2005 application/pdf http://ku.oai.elaba.lt/documents/2439906.pdf http://ku.lvb.lt/KU:ELABAPDB2439906&prefLang=en_US lit eng lit eng info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/doi/10.15388/baltistica.0.6.767 http://ku.oai.elaba.lt/documents/2439906.pdf http://ku.lvb.lt/KU:ELABAPDB2439906&prefLang=en_US info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Baltistica : baltų kalbotyros žurnalas, Vilnius : Vilniaus universiteto leidykla, 2005, priedas 6, p. 161-168 ISSN 0132-6503 eISSN 2345-0045 info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2005 ftlithuaniansrc https://doi.org/10.15388/baltistica.0.6.767 2021-12-02T00:41:48Z Although many archeological and onomastic publications demonstrate the existence of a Baltic substratum over a rather large section of the territory of the Eastern and Western Slavs, some Slavic studies scholars still ignore the influence exerted by this substratum in the evolution of the vocabulary, phonetics and other linguistic aspects of Slavic dialects. One group of linguists adheres to the principle that in elucidating the causes of changes taking place in a language, one must give priority to the patterns of internal language development. Others identify the lexical substratum with marginal (borderland) borrowings. But a drawback to the notion of substratum influence is the extremely large number of common features exclusive to the Balts and the Slavs, such that loanwords are ignored, especially the older loanwords of substratum origin. Scholars find somewhat more substratum Balticisms in the Polish and Belarusian dialects (especially in the Polesje region), but in northwest Russia, where there is a great abundance of hydronyms of Baltic origin, conspicuously few appellative Balticisms are reported. This article not only draws attention to this paradox, but also attempts to determine in which layers of the Russian vocabulary certain still unidentified loanwords from the Baltic languages are concealed. Article in Journal/Newspaper Northwest Russia LSRC VL (Lithuanian Social Research Centre Virtual Library) Baltistica 0 6
institution Open Polar
collection LSRC VL (Lithuanian Social Research Centre Virtual Library)
op_collection_id ftlithuaniansrc
language Lithuanian
English
description Although many archeological and onomastic publications demonstrate the existence of a Baltic substratum over a rather large section of the territory of the Eastern and Western Slavs, some Slavic studies scholars still ignore the influence exerted by this substratum in the evolution of the vocabulary, phonetics and other linguistic aspects of Slavic dialects. One group of linguists adheres to the principle that in elucidating the causes of changes taking place in a language, one must give priority to the patterns of internal language development. Others identify the lexical substratum with marginal (borderland) borrowings. But a drawback to the notion of substratum influence is the extremely large number of common features exclusive to the Balts and the Slavs, such that loanwords are ignored, especially the older loanwords of substratum origin. Scholars find somewhat more substratum Balticisms in the Polish and Belarusian dialects (especially in the Polesje region), but in northwest Russia, where there is a great abundance of hydronyms of Baltic origin, conspicuously few appellative Balticisms are reported. This article not only draws attention to this paradox, but also attempts to determine in which layers of the Russian vocabulary certain still unidentified loanwords from the Baltic languages are concealed.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Laučiūtė, Jūratė Sofija
spellingShingle Laučiūtė, Jūratė Sofija
Baltų substratas rytų slavų kalbose
author_facet Laučiūtė, Jūratė Sofija
author_sort Laučiūtė, Jūratė Sofija
title Baltų substratas rytų slavų kalbose
title_short Baltų substratas rytų slavų kalbose
title_full Baltų substratas rytų slavų kalbose
title_fullStr Baltų substratas rytų slavų kalbose
title_full_unstemmed Baltų substratas rytų slavų kalbose
title_sort baltų substratas rytų slavų kalbose
publishDate 2005
url http://ku.oai.elaba.lt/documents/2439906.pdf
http://ku.lvb.lt/KU:ELABAPDB2439906&prefLang=en_US
genre Northwest Russia
genre_facet Northwest Russia
op_source Baltistica : baltų kalbotyros žurnalas, Vilnius : Vilniaus universiteto leidykla, 2005, priedas 6, p. 161-168
ISSN 0132-6503
eISSN 2345-0045
op_relation info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/doi/10.15388/baltistica.0.6.767
http://ku.oai.elaba.lt/documents/2439906.pdf
http://ku.lvb.lt/KU:ELABAPDB2439906&prefLang=en_US
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.15388/baltistica.0.6.767
container_title Baltistica
container_volume 0
container_issue 6
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