Search results for "Ethnonym"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

De Finnis cornutis

2014

<p><em>Horned Finns</em>. The ‘cornuti Finni’ mentioned in the <em>Historia Norwegiae</em> have not found their explanation, because the Latin word <em>cornu</em>, from which the adjective is derived, has been understood in the strict sense of ‘horn on the head’. The Latin word, however, also means ‘hoof’ of horses or ‘cloven hoof’ of cows and goats, even of the mythologic Faunus and Pan. In December 1913 Kai Donner saw in Dudinka Avam-Samojeds, who because of their cylindrically shaped reindeer winter boots, the front of which was hoof-shaped, were called ‘hoofed men’ (in Finnish ‘kaviolliset miehet’). In the extracts of Aristeas of Proconnesus, wh…

French horncalceamenta Samoiedorumetymologia nominis LappiLatin wordAncient historyGenealogyGeographylcsh:Norwegian literatureEthnonymHippopodeslcsh:PT8301-9155Cornua pedumEtymologyCloven hoofMeaning (existential)AigipodesAdjectiveFoot (unit)Nordlit
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I nomi dei venti in Sicilia tra toponomastica, geomorfologia e “mondo magico”. Possibili itinerari di ricerca

2014

Il sistema anemonomastico siciliano appare leggibile su due livelli: da un lato i nomi dialettali dei venti ripropongono in larga misura quelli presenti nell’italiano tramontana, maestrale, greco, scirocco, libeccio, dall’altro si rileva un numero impressionante di anemonimi rifatti su un toponimo e, più spesso, sull’etnico corrispondente, se il paese che dà il nome al vento è situato lungo la direzione da cui esso spira. Ciò è particolarmente evidente per i nomi dei venti “freddi”. Per essi, mediante una ricerca su una piccola porzione del territorio siciliano le Madonie , è stato possibile raccogliere almeno due anemonimi di origine toponimica in ciascuno dei centri indagati. Mediante lo …

Settore L-FIL-LET/12 - Linguistica Italianaetnodialettologia meteoronimi anemonimi venti e mondo magico geografia linguistica Atlante Linguistico della SiciliaSicilY Lexicography Cartography Ethnonyms Wind Nouns Wind Nouns meaning "Devil"
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The Slovak Case: From Upper Hungary’s Slavophone Populus to Slovak Nationalism and the Czechoslovak Nation

2009

As a political entity, Slovakia emerged in 1918 within the broader framework of Czechoslovakia. The ethnonym ‘Slovak,’ though known since the mid-15th century, denoted either a Slav in general or a Slavophone inhabitant of Upper Hungary. Only in the course of the 19th century was the usage limited exclusively to the latter case. Although the name ‘Slovakia’ for the region where the Slovaks lived appeared at the end of the 18th century, it did not gain any official recognition until 1918 when Czechoslovakia came into being. Clearly, the nationalism of the Slovaks is much more steeped in ethnicity than that of the Magyars, the Poles, or the Czechs (Flajshans 1924: 5, 307).

PoliticsGeographyEthnonymEthnic grouplanguageSlovakSlavic languagesOfficial languageAncient historylanguage.human_languageNationalism
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