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CZECH STUDIES: LANGUAGE

CZECH STUDIES: LANGUAGE Czech Studies LANGUAGE I. GENERAL V. Skalicka has assembled a number of his articles on the general theme of linguistic change: the result is a thoughtful and stimu­ lating book: V. Skalicka, Vyvoj jazyka. The same author gives a critical survey of recent work on linguistic typology: I d., 'Z nove typologicke literatury', SaS, xxi, 41-3. Of articles on general linguistic topics the following are particu­ larly noteworthy: P. Trost, 'K dnesni situaci historicke fono­ logie', SaS, xxi, 7-9; A. V. Isacenko, 'Slovesny vid, slovesna akce a obecny charakter slovesneho deje', ib., 9-16; I. Nemec, 'Nadbytecnost jako Cinitel vyvoje slovesne morfologie slovanske', ib., 16-23. 2. LEXICOGRAPHY The first vol. of the Academy's three-vol. dictionary of the con­ B. Havranek, etc., Slovnik temporary language is complete: spisovneho jazyka leskeho, I, A-M (xxviii+ 1311 pp.); the first fasc. of vol. II (128 pp.) covers N-ne. Two dictionaries of linguistic terminology are of particular interest: 0. Man and L. Koval, Rusko-lesky slovnik lingvisticke terminologie; J. Vachek (with Josef Dubsky), Dictionnaire de linguistique de I' ecole de Prague, Utrecht-Antwerp (a publication of the Comite International Permanent des Linguistes). The latter vol., which illustrates every head-word with a series of relevant quotations, can serve http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png The Year's Work in Modern Language Studies Brill

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Publisher
Brill
Copyright
Copyright © Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands
ISSN
0084-4152
eISSN
2222-4297
DOI
10.1163/22224297-90003519
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Czech Studies LANGUAGE I. GENERAL V. Skalicka has assembled a number of his articles on the general theme of linguistic change: the result is a thoughtful and stimu­ lating book: V. Skalicka, Vyvoj jazyka. The same author gives a critical survey of recent work on linguistic typology: I d., 'Z nove typologicke literatury', SaS, xxi, 41-3. Of articles on general linguistic topics the following are particu­ larly noteworthy: P. Trost, 'K dnesni situaci historicke fono­ logie', SaS, xxi, 7-9; A. V. Isacenko, 'Slovesny vid, slovesna akce a obecny charakter slovesneho deje', ib., 9-16; I. Nemec, 'Nadbytecnost jako Cinitel vyvoje slovesne morfologie slovanske', ib., 16-23. 2. LEXICOGRAPHY The first vol. of the Academy's three-vol. dictionary of the con­ B. Havranek, etc., Slovnik temporary language is complete: spisovneho jazyka leskeho, I, A-M (xxviii+ 1311 pp.); the first fasc. of vol. II (128 pp.) covers N-ne. Two dictionaries of linguistic terminology are of particular interest: 0. Man and L. Koval, Rusko-lesky slovnik lingvisticke terminologie; J. Vachek (with Josef Dubsky), Dictionnaire de linguistique de I' ecole de Prague, Utrecht-Antwerp (a publication of the Comite International Permanent des Linguistes). The latter vol., which illustrates every head-word with a series of relevant quotations, can serve

Journal

The Year's Work in Modern Language StudiesBrill

Published: Mar 13, 1962

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