「slavic」の共起表現一覧(1語左で並び替え)
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iginna av Venden) (10th-11th centuries), was a | Slavic Viking age woman. |
CNVTI regis nostri"), which without doubt is a | Slavic name. |
sputed by the Dutch, English and French) and a | slavic twist. |
It is also the largest edition in a | Slavic language by the number of articles, as well as |
cts and possibly mixed with the Dragovites - a | Slavic tribe in the region. |
They are the native languages of the Sorbs, a | Slavic minority in the Lusatia region of eastern Germ |
period, he started using the name Dragotin, a | Slavic version of the name Karel (Charles). |
The use of a name derived from Canaan for a | Slavic language spoken by a Jewish peoples living in |
of the most significant writers in Sorbian, a | Slavic language, and his 150th birthday was celebrate |
This is a | Slavic name. |
Brod (disambiguation), a | Slavic toponym. |
A | Slavic cognate is bog "god". |
Saafet decided to adopt a | Slavic name - Ruska (Bulgarian: Руска). |
Exhibiting traits of a | Slavic national mysticism, Kruchenykh aimed at recove |
Svarog (Old Church Slavonic: Сваро́гъ) is a | Slavic deity known primarily from the Hypatian Codex, |
Mezamir founded a | Slavic confederation in 560 and became a very powerfu |
Its name is derived from a | Slavic word meaning "fast-flowing". |
Mezamir founded a | Slavic confederation before 560 and became a very pow |
ki (Словянски and Словјански in Cyrillic) is a | Slavic interlanguage, created in 2006 by a group of l |
d in the 820s, they were replaced largely by a | Slavic people, who established the state of Great Mor |
his identity: first, that there actually was a | Slavic prince of that name; second, that this was the |
ludes Giddings and other nearby towns) spoke a | Slavic language other than Polish or Russian at home. |
lled Tova, Tofa or Thora, (10th century) was a | Slavic princess and a Danish Viking Age queen consort |
bottled in the United States, Dubra utilizes a | Slavic name. |
CNVTI regis nostri"), which without doubt is a | Slavic name. |
He also published many articles about | Slavic ethnography and archaeology and was editor of |
Neither the site itself, nor the adjacent | Slavic burghs Kessin and Fresendorf have yet been suf |
medovukha, a honey-made spirit popular in all | Slavic countries. |
Hope Channel on 39.1, 3ABN on 39.2 and an all | Slavic, 24/7 Christian channel on 39.3, and Loma Lind |
After all | Slavic Pomeranian tribes had lost their independence |
While the word "bog" denoted nearly all | Slavic gods, the word Deva in its cognate Div was use |
specially Count Adolf II of Holstein, allowing | Slavic pirates to attack the Danes. |
American | Slavic and East European Review. |
efferson and the Russian Decembrists, American | Slavic and East European Review, Vol. 9, No. 3. (Oct. |
inally low frequency of approximately 1% among | Slavic and Uralic peoples of Eastern Europe; also det |
terary forgery claimed to be a text of ancient | Slavic religion and history written on wooden planks. |
The theme of the album is ancient | Slavic culture and Slavic mythology. |
gy in the Church Slavonic language, an ancient | Slavic language.) |
rn slawischen Literaturen ("History of Ancient | Slavic Literatures", Leipzig, 1908). |
to the Native Country (Russian War Relief) and | Slavic organizations. |
ril 24, is found in both the Roman, Irish, and | Slavic martyrologies and in the metrical calendar of |
racism: "Expansion of the Teutonic Nordics and | Slavic Alpines". |
ting Corporation as a translator of German and | Slavic languages. |
g school in Oostakker and studied Germanic and | Slavic philology at the University of Ghent. |
German, Greek, Caribbean, Middle Eastern, and | Slavic origins available as well. |
jazz, bebop, Latin folk music, modal jazz and | Slavic folk music informed by Philipsek's burgeoning |
ger combined with socialist, "single-tax," and | Slavic communal ideas shaped his world view. |
d in Prague, studying German, art history, and | Slavic languages before turning to journalism and wri |
Two fibulae and | Slavic pottery made 550-600 show that a considerable |
olish majority alongside Jewish population and | Slavic groups. |
ng of Kreisler's transcriptions of Russian and | Slavic pieces. |
l earned a B.A. in International Relations and | Slavic Languages and an M.A. in Slavic and East Europ |
us of Polish in the Department of Germanic and | Slavic Languages of Brigham Young University (BYU) in |
ded east towards Moscow, until the Finnish and | Slavic tribes rebelled and drove the Varangians overs |
s transmitted through Grobin to the Baltic and | Slavic hinterland. |
soup traditional to some Northern European and | Slavic countries. |
of Onogur, Khazar, Pecheneg, Magyar, Alan, and | Slavic influences. |
l studies, English, French studies, German and | Slavic studies, Hispanic studies, history, kinesiolog |
the Primary Chronicle, in 862, the Finnic and | Slavic tribes rebelled against the Varangian Rus, dri |
cation, General Studies, Hellenic Studies, and | Slavic Studies. |
omics, English, French and Italian, German and | Slavic Studies, History, Music, Philosophy, Political |
In both the Greek and | Slavic traditions the term Megalynarion also describe |
in 896, Arnulf gave Lower Pannonia to another | Slavic duke, Braslav, as a fiefdom. |
Before the Hungarians conquered the area, | Slavic and Avar tribes lived here. |
ing the comparative method to all the attested | Slavic languages as well as other Indo-European langu |
the head of the Journalism Department at Baku | Slavic University. |
he Mammoth Hunters indicates that she might be | Slavic. |
ess inner feelings reinforces a mood of bleak, | Slavic despair..[there is a] Chekhovian atmosphere, u |
iddle Ages, Pomerania was largely populated by | Slavic Pomeranians and Liuticians, who spoke the Pome |
The surrounding countryside was settled by | Slavic tribes at the beginning of the 6th century. |
By that time, Pomerania was inhabited by | Slavic Wends, yet several Viking trade posts were set |
odox community with masses held in both Church | Slavic and Finnish. |
Shrine Church of St. Stanislaus in Cleveland's | Slavic Village neighborhood. |
Meillet's law is a Common | Slavic accent law, named after French Indo-Europeanis |
For many Common | Slavic dialects-including most of West Slavic, all bu |
or close to the burgh, is not yet determined,A | Slavic burgh as a predecessor for a Scandinavian sett |
unication between representatives of different | Slavic nations, as well as to allow people who don't |
onal Library manuscript is one of the earliest | Slavic transcriptions of this work, abounding in illu |
entury, thus constituting some of the earliest | Slavic settlements near the Baltic coast. |
904 showing a spring landscape with some early | Slavic ships on the background and the In the Blue Ex |
During 9th century an early | Slavic settlement was established. |
the region and are related to the local early | Slavic population, according to others they are desce |
d with two siege machines and a number of East | Slavic archers. |
sobriquet, meaning "Eight-Minded" in Old East | Slavic, was granted to him in recognition of his wisd |
tation was developed in Kievan Rus' as an East | Slavic refinement of the Byzantine neumatic musical n |
that the name of the Kievan Rus', the old East | Slavic state, may have originated from the name of th |
dovanie and is now applied to similar Old East | Slavic celebrations of other old significant holidays |
received its name after the Severians, an East | Slavic tribe which inhabited the territory in the lat |
r of the Primary Chronicle, (the earliest East | Slavic chronicle), Life of the Venerable Theodosius o |
nt as an act of brotherly help for fellow East | Slavic peoples |
s, and 32% represented Russians and other East | Slavic nationalities. |
The control of the estuary (known in East | Slavic sources as Beloberezhye, or White Shores) was |
It is directly comparable to the Old East | Slavic name Vladimir and the Germanic name Valdemar, |
xture of some Eastern Slovak dialects and East | Slavic features (namely, Russian Church Slavonic, Rus |
iridon Psalter, is one of the most famous East | Slavic illuminated manuscripts, containing over three |
me literally means "swan" and is a common East | Slavic epithet for elegant women, moving with grace: |
Bulgarians facilitated the conversion of East | Slavic peoples, most notably the Rus', predecessors o |
re, Scythia, Chernyakhov culture, and Old East | Slavic cultures. |
It may also be an archaic form of the East | Slavic word kolovorot for "brace". |
The word means "right hand" in the Old East | Slavic language. |
served in the Old Novgorod dialect of Old East | Slavic. |
and the Carpatho-Ruthenians were the last East | Slavic people that kept the ancient historic name (Ru |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Mykolayovich |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Vasylyovych |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Spirov and t |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Kalistratovi |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Mushanbetovi |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Georgiev and |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Anatolevich |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Pradanov and |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Fyodorovich |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Magomedbashi |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Amberkovich |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Vladimirovic |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Felekhdinovi |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Petkov and t |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Mykolayovych |
ussian or Ukrainian: Землянка) - is an Eastern | Slavic name for a dugout or earth-house which was use |
terms derives from the name of an old Eastern | Slavic tribe called the Krivichs, who used to inhabit |
It could have been either | Slavic, as the Slavic Venedi once held Pomerania, or |
New Cambridge History of the Byzantine Empire, | Slavic Review, p. 111, 1968. |
Niklot's death ended | Slavic control in Mecklenburg up to the Peene River. |
in Russia unleashing "the hatred of the entire | Slavic element, of this monstrous family of peoples" |
scapes, realistic compositions, Russian epics, | slavic and german mythology, and battle painting. |
This may indicate that fair-haired European | Slavic girls from the north of Caucasus mountains wer |
lls, that are tied to conservative evangelical | Slavic communities in Washington State and California |
nised campaigns against the Veleti, and fellow | Slavic tribe of the Linonen. |
wanted to create a language for the fictional | Slavic country of Slovetzia. |
vists from Russia and Belarus organizing first | Slavic Gay Pride in Moscow on the day of the Eurovisi |
he Southeast Studies Centre and the School for | Slavic and Southeast Studies at the University Colleg |
Student Prize of the American Association for | Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies was named |
rofessor at the Hokkaido University Center for | Slavic Studies. |
mation of the empire into a federation of free | Slavic people with Russians being one of the equal ra |
especially cosmonauts from | slavic nations like Czech Republic or Slovacia can le |
tion of most of the Pomeranian tribes was from | Slavic to German in the 13th century. |
es to that of German, with some influence from | Slavic languages and Hebrew. |
river flowing through it, in turn derived from | Slavic sol ("salt") - in reference to the area's salt |
Bohopol literally means the city of God, from | Slavic Boh or Bog, God, although it can also be expla |
already contained around a hundred loans from | Slavic languages, including words such as "trup" (bod |
Siwucha is one of the generic | Slavic words for a moonshine. |
ction offers works in major Romance, Germanic, | Slavic, and Celtic languages. |
114: Suite, Two Short Pieces, Toccata Giocosa, | Slavic Rhapsody (The Novgorod Kremlin at Night), Burl |
For Pomeranian settlements, see Grad ( | Slavic settlement). |
Baba, Grandmother ( | Slavic Languages) |
ave brought with her a great dowry, as a great | Slavic influence is represented in Sweden from her ti |
In 983, the brothers were leaders of the great | Slavic revolt, which German historiography labels the |
s found further Eastward, including the Greek, | Slavic (including Russian), Uralic, and Albanian lang |
Its name has | slavic roots and translates appromximately as a dimin |
arsons at 1000 South Paulina St., in a heavily | Slavic district of Chicago's near west side. |
bly have been his second name, considering his | Slavic heritage. |
ch Photius send missionaries to evangelize his | Slavic subjects. |
ro Sclavo or Uuonomiro Sclavo), because of his | Slavic origin. |
, he wrote some of the most important works in | Slavic studies, historiography and philology. |
he received his PhD, then became a lecturer in | Slavic languages in 1917 and an instructor in 1921. |
In | Slavic Orthodox use, no one below the rank of subdeac |
English and Lowland Scots folklore), Buyan in | Slavic Mythology and the realms of the Gods and the d |
reted as polarization of accentual mobility in | Slavic, due to which accent in the words with mobile |
He received his M.A. in | Slavic languages and Literature from Harvard Universi |
ening of Christmas Eve, a central tradition in | Slavic Christmas celebrations in Bulgaria, Bosnia and |
In | Slavic languages, it represents the Lechitic-West Sla |
nternational Relations in 1986, and an M.A. in | Slavic Linguistics in 1987. |
nguage proverbs are words of wisdom created in | Slavic languages by Slavic peoples. |
In | Slavic mythology, Hors (Old Church Slavonic: Хърсъ, C |
onour of Bulgarian khan Asparuh, whose name in | Slavic was Isperih. |
in the words belonging to mobile paradigms in | Slavic accent shifts from the first syllable to the p |
In | Slavic paganism kalyna also represents a beauty of a |
Aqua vitae was also known in | Slavic lands. |
In | Slavic and Chinese traditions, any corpse that was ju |
In | Slavic mythology, Koschei is an evil person of ugly s |
phonetics, and in 1891 the first professor in | Slavic languages. |
In | Slavic tradition, the egg (similar to icons) is writt |
word debra which means "waterflown valley" in | Slavic dialects. |
Zaria or Zoria is the goddess of beauty in | Slavic mythology. |
vard University in 1938 with an A.B. degree in | Slavic Languages, History and Literature, and also st |
The name of Trypillia means "three fields" in | Slavic languages and is unrelated to Tripoli. |
the Rutgers University (BA) and earned a MA in | Slavic Languages and Literatures from the University |
The root is the same as in | Slavic drug meaning "companion" (see druzhina). |
M.A. and Ph.D degrees from Brown University in | Slavic Language and Literature. |
olish pronunciation: ) is a kind of vampire in | Slavic (and especially Polish) folklore. |
ceived a B.A. from Vassar and later a Ph.D. in | Slavic Linguistics from Columbia University. |
iversity of California, Berkeley with an MA in | Slavic Languages, and from the University of Massachu |
During 1991-93, he was a Visiting Fellow in | Slavic Languages and Literatures at Harvard Universit |
resentative of all the Franciscan provinces in | Slavic countries and the chief treasurer of the Order |
Austrian option gained a majority of votes in | Slavic Zone A, the second stage of the referendum in |
The defenders of these positions included | Slavic soldiers and SS troops. |
the whole-sale extermination of the indigenous | Slavic and Baltic inhabitants. |
raced back to the Silingi through intermediate | Slavic forms. |
in Asia and Africa, but not an expansion into | Slavic lands. |
lural form of dumka, is a term introduced into | Slavic languages from the Ukrainian. |
Rosalia in Latin, was loaned as Rusaliya into | Slavic. |
sal by Charlemagne in the only expedition into | Slavic territory led by Charlemagne himself, in 798, |
Bethisad Croatian, for example, is an invented | Slavic language that in many respects is closer to Cz |
ns of Fabrizio, an Italian, Anja (an Italian's | slavic girlfriend) and all of the children. |
the battle of a Storm god and a Dragon and its | Slavic version, the fight of Perun and Veles. |
Empire of Constantinople ("New Rome") and its | Slavic commonwealth centered at Moscow. |
pak" in Karakalpak) and the "Chernye Klobuki" ( | Slavic name of same meaning). |
as I to serve the spiritual needs of the large | Slavic Orthodox community in the Galata section of Is |
rn of the century the neighborhood was largely | Slavic. |
It is the largest | Slavic Wikipedia, surpassing the Polish Wikipedia eig |
The Varangian (and later | Slavic) military stationed at Duboviki could effectiv |
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