翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Rijcklof van Goens
・ Rijeka
・ Rijeka (disambiguation)
・ Rijeka (Trnovo)
・ Rijeka (Višegrad)
・ Rijeka Airport
・ Rijeka bez imena
・ Rijeka Carnival
・ Rijeka Cathedral
・ Rijeka city derby
・ Rijeka Crnojevića
・ Rijeka Crnojevića (river)
・ Rijeka Crnojevića bridge
・ Rijeka Dubrovačka
・ Rijeka Open
Rijeka Philological School
・ Rijeka Synagogue
・ Rijeka, Foča
・ Rijeka–Pula Derby (Rijeka vs Istra 1961)
・ Rijeke
・ Rijen
・ Rijeća
・ Riji
・ Rijk de Gooyer
・ Rijke tube
・ Rijkerswoerd
・ Rijkevorsel
・ Rijkhoven
・ Rijkman Groenink
・ Rijksakademie


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Rijeka Philological School : ウィキペディア英語版
Rijeka Philological School

Rijeka Philological School ((クロアチア語:Riječka filološka škola)) was a 19th-century philological school that operated in Rijeka, offering a set of solutions for the issues involved in the standardization of Croatian literary language. It was led by Fran Kurelac.
According to Kurelac, standard language should be based on elements shared by most of the Slavic languages. Modern literary language should be based on archaic forms, so archaicity became the main characteristic of the language of school's proponents. Among such features where:
* zero morpheme as the genitive plural ending (''jelen'', ''žen'', ''sel'')
* usage of dual in nouns and verbs (''dvaju rukopisu'', ''uvedosta me u kuću'')
* first-person singular present form on ''-u'' (''raduju se'' "I rejoice", as opposed to ''radujem se'')
* usage of the demonstrative pronoun ''s'', ''si'', ''se'' "this, that" (''se jeseni'' "this autumn")
* usage of infinitives without the final ''-i'' (''pokazat'')
* usage of archaic Croatian words, Church Slavonicisms and words from other Slavic languages (''božjački'' "poorly, miserably", ''naočnjaci'' "glasses", ''paklina'' "resin", ''horugva'' "flag", ''batog'' "stick, club", ''rabota'' "work" etc.)
Kurelac's enthusiasm for archaic forms provided a basis for his purist views. He was opposed to loanwords and calques from German, Italian and Ottoman Turkish, but a bit more tolerant towards the loanwords from Slavic languages. Because most of his followers were gymnasium students with no trained future philologist among them, Rijeka Philological School soon ceased being a relevant competitor to Zagreb Philological School.
One of the most active followers was Ivan Dežman, who published ''Rěčnik lěčničkoga nazivlja'' (Zagreb, 1868).
==See also==

* Zagreb Philological School
* Zadar Philological School

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Rijeka Philological School」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.