A Debreceni Déri Múzeum Évkönyve 1987 (Debrecen, 1988)
Néprajz - Dankó Imre: Extraordinary Forms of Purchase and Acquisition
gozás (clearing debts by work); árengedményes vásár (cut price sales); árverés (auction); bérlet (lease, renting); csalás (fraud) ; elkobzás (confiscation) ; elnyerés (winning) ; felpénz (advance payment); foglaló (deposit); gyűjtés (amassing); hitel (H. P.—buying on credit); hódítás (conquest); járadék (allowance) ; jelképes ár (nominal price) ; jótékony vétel—felülfizetés (charity purchase, over-pay) ; jóvátétel (Compensation), jutalom (reward, recompense); kártérítés (damages); kedvezményes vásár (cut price sales); kényszereladás (forced sale); kényszervétel (forced purchase); kommenciós bér (combined pay); kótyavetye (inexpensive, spend-thrift auction); kötvény (debenture) ; lopás (stealing, theft); nyerés (winning); öröklés (inheritance) ; rablás (robbery); találni (finding); váltó (bill of exchange); vám (customs); tombola (lottery); zálog (pawn); zsarolás (blackmail). Although the paper—apart from the thirty-six internal extraordinary forms of purchase and acqusition—presents several others as well (such as forms connected with "gathering livelihood" — gyűjtögetés), "drowry" (hozomány), "lootin" (fosztogatás), "loan" (kölcsön), its author could not attempt at giving an entirely complete account of all the means and ways of the extraordinary forms of purchase and acquisition. His paper is the first attempt to give a comprehensive picture of the extraordinary forms of purchase and acquisition and has been intended to contribute to the elucidation of individual terms through references to jurisprudence and juristic traditions as well as linguistic testimonies. Several terms concerning exchange of goods and barter are explained in this paper, which also contains references to a similar study by the same author to come out in the near futuer to throw even more light on terminology. 202