Birtalan Ágnes: Kalmyk Folklore and Folk Culture in the Mid-19th Century: Philological Studies on the Basis of Gábor Bálint of Szentkatolna’s Kalmyk Texts.

LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS AND SPECIAL SIGNS

LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS AND SPECIAL SIGNS LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS AND OTHER SPECIAL SIGNS Bálint quotation from Bálint's Kalmyk Manuscript Darkh. Darkhat Kalm. If it is not followed with a lexicographic data Kalm. means the reconstructed Kalmyk form of Bálint's text. Kalm.B. "Bookish" i. e. literary or formal expression (Ramstedt's designation) Kalm.D. Dörböt dialect of Kalmyk Kalm.Ö. Ölöt material in Ramstedt's dictionary Kalm.T. Torgut dialect of Kalmyk Kalm.Tw. West-Torgut dialect of the Kalmyk Khal. Khalkha Mong. Written Mongolian Oir. Spoken Oirat Russ. Russian Skr. Sanskrit Tib. Tibetan W.Oir. Written Oirat BIBLIOGRAPHICAL ABBREVIATIONS OF JOURNALS AND THE MOST FREQUENT REFERENCES AEH Acta Ethnographica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae AOH Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae Bálint: Jelentése. Bálint Gábor Jelentése Oroszország- és Ázsiában tett utazásáról és nyelvészeti tanulmányairól. Melléklet öt khálymik dano hangjegye. In: Értekezések a Magyar Tudományos Akadémia Nyelv- és Széptudományi Osztálya köréből. IV. (1875) pp. 1-19. [Gábor Bálint's report on his journey carried out in Russia and Asia and on his linguistic studies. With notes of five Kalmyk songs. In: Treatises from the Department of Linguistics and Aesthetics of the Hungarian Academy of the Sciences] Bawden Bawden, Charles R.: Mongolian - English Dictionary. London, Kegan Paul International 1997. Bergmann Bergmann, Benjamin: Nomadische Streiferein unter den Kalmücken in den Jahren 1802 und 1803.1-IV. Riga 1804-1805. 22

Next

/
Thumbnails
Contents