Page 3 of 4 FirstFirst 1234 LastLast
Results 21 to 30 of 39

Thread: NW Croat vs Czech-Slovak members PCA

  1. #21
    account terminated.
    Join Date
    Jan 2014
    Last Online
    09-18-2023 @ 04:11 PM
    Ethnicity
    N/A
    Country
    Abkhazia
    Gender
    Posts
    48,274
    Thumbs Up/Down
    Received: 52,638/1,011
    Given: 43,539/788

    1 Not allowed! Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Leto View Post
    But those dialects along the border with Slovenia are more like Slovene? I mean it's a such a small territory, why would they be radically different from each other?
    Slovenian itself is not uniform btw. Actually very far from that.

    "There are 46 different dialects in Slovenia"

    On account of only 2.3 million people speaking the language, the 46 dialects of Slovenian language, often classifies Slovene as the most diverse Slavic Language. Slovenian dialects are categorized into seven regional groups: Carinthian, Upper Carniolan, Lower Carniolan, Littoral, Rovte, Styrian, and Pannonian. Sometimes dialects can be so different from one other, that it is hard for people from different parts of Slovenia to understand each other. The diversity of the Slovenian language is well captured in a Slovene proverb “Vsaka vas ima svoj glas “, meaning “every village has its own voice.”

    https://theculturetrip.com/europe/sl...nian-language/

  2. #22
    Veteran Member Apricity Funding Member
    "Friend of Apricity"

    rothaer's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2019
    Last Online
    @
    Ethnicity
    German
    Ancestry
    Eastern German
    Country
    Germany
    Gender
    Posts
    7,785
    Thumbs Up/Down
    Received: 8,377/56
    Given: 8,658/5

    1 Not allowed! Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Insuperable View Post
    Differences between the dialactes are a lot bigger than the 'what' usage using kaj, ča or što. It is just that dialactes were named after the usage of 'what'.
    That I was aware of, so I expressly limited my statement to that one word. After what Alenka wrote I got one important thing wrong, but the conclusion might be applicable as well. I'll wait for what she answers to my latest post...

  3. #23
    Veteran Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2014
    Last Online
    10-25-2025 @ 03:00 PM
    Meta-Ethnicity
    Indo-European, Slavic
    Ethnicity
    Russian (privately view myself as Aryan)
    Country
    Brunei
    Region
    Russian Turkestan General Governorship
    Y-DNA
    R1a-Z282-YP350
    Religion
    Orthodox Christian
    Gender
    Posts
    24,264
    Thumbs Up/Down
    Received: 15,697/315
    Given: 8,913/358

    2 Not allowed! Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Stearsolina View Post
    Slovenian itself is not uniform btw. Actually very far from that.

    "There are 46 different dialects in Slovenia"

    On account of only 2.3 million people speaking the language, the 46 dialects of Slovenian language, often classifies Slovene as the most diverse Slavic Language. Slovenian dialects are categorized into seven regional groups: Carinthian, Upper Carniolan, Lower Carniolan, Littoral, Rovte, Styrian, and Pannonian. Sometimes dialects can be so different from one other, that it is hard for people from different parts of Slovenia to understand each other. The diversity of the Slovenian language is well captured in a Slovene proverb “Vsaka vas ima svoj glas “, meaning “every village has its own voice.”

    https://theculturetrip.com/europe/sl...nian-language/
    It is fascinating how they have managed to survive on such a small territory well into modern times.

  4. #24
    ᓚ₍ ^. .^₎ Alenka's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2012
    Last Online
    Today @ 12:44 PM
    Ethnicity
    half Persian, half Siamese
    Country
    Slovakia
    Taxonomy
    meow
    Gender
    Posts
    4,377
    Thumbs Up/Down
    Received: 6,194/39
    Given: 5,593/22

    1 Not allowed! Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by rothaer View Post
    So there was a same root that developed into koji in Shtokavian and kaj in Kajkavian. So if I get you right, it's also not about a real absence of that word in the respective other dialect, but seemingly a question of how the usage developed.
    Yes.

    Quote Originally Posted by rothaer View Post
    Is there any time estimate for that development?
    I don't know.

    Quote Originally Posted by rothaer View Post
    And what does koji mean in Shtokavian?
    It means which.

  5. #25
    Veteran Member Apricity Funding Member
    "Friend of Apricity"

    rothaer's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2019
    Last Online
    @
    Ethnicity
    German
    Ancestry
    Eastern German
    Country
    Germany
    Gender
    Posts
    7,785
    Thumbs Up/Down
    Received: 8,377/56
    Given: 8,658/5

    0 Not allowed! Not allowed!

    Default

    [And what does koji mean in Shtokavian?]

    Quote Originally Posted by Alenka View Post
    (...) It means which.
    This is thinkworthy. Leto, afaik a Russian, wrote above: "Kakov is practically the same as kakoj, both mean which (welch) and kak means how (wie)."

    Now, is it by chance that Shtokavian koji means the same (i. e. which) as Russian kakov or does kaj and koji in fact have the same etymological root as kak(ov), as I initially took for granted?

  6. #26
    ᓚ₍ ^. .^₎ Alenka's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2012
    Last Online
    Today @ 12:44 PM
    Ethnicity
    half Persian, half Siamese
    Country
    Slovakia
    Taxonomy
    meow
    Gender
    Posts
    4,377
    Thumbs Up/Down
    Received: 6,194/39
    Given: 5,593/22

    1 Not allowed! Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by rothaer View Post
    [And what does koji mean in Shtokavian?]



    This is thinkworthy. Leto, afaik a Russian, wrote above: "Kakov is practically the same as kakoj, both mean which (welch) and kak means how (wie)."

    Now, is it by chance that Shtokavian koji means the same (i. e. which) as Russian kakov or has kaj and koji in fact the same etymological root as kak(ov), as I initially took for granted?
    Kak and kakov are from the root kakъ.
    Kaj and koji are from the root kъjь.

  7. #27
    Veteran Member Apricity Funding Member
    "Friend of Apricity"

    rothaer's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2019
    Last Online
    @
    Ethnicity
    German
    Ancestry
    Eastern German
    Country
    Germany
    Gender
    Posts
    7,785
    Thumbs Up/Down
    Received: 8,377/56
    Given: 8,658/5

    0 Not allowed! Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Alenka View Post
    Kak and kakov are from the root kakъ.
    Kaj and koji are from the root kъjь.
    That I understand. My question aims at if kakъ and kъjь do have a common root. (And hence Shtokavian koji and Russian kakov (both means which) do not by chance have the same meaning, but by a common etymological root.)

  8. #28
    ᓚ₍ ^. .^₎ Alenka's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2012
    Last Online
    Today @ 12:44 PM
    Ethnicity
    half Persian, half Siamese
    Country
    Slovakia
    Taxonomy
    meow
    Gender
    Posts
    4,377
    Thumbs Up/Down
    Received: 6,194/39
    Given: 5,593/22

    0 Not allowed! Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by rothaer View Post
    That I understand. My question aims at if kakъ and kъjь do have a common root. (And hence Shtokavian koji and Russian kakov (both means which) do not by chance have the same meaning, but by a common etymological root.)
    It's all vaguely related, but kakъ and kъjь are different root branches.
    There's also another third branch.
    Here's all three:
    - *jь, *čьjь, *jьnъ, *kъjь, *onъ, *ovъ, *sь, *tъ, *vьśь
    - *jakъ, *jьnakъ, *kakъ, *onakъ, *ovakъ, *sicь, *takъ, *vьśakъ
    - *koterъ, *jeterъ

  9. #29
    Veteran Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2019
    Last Online
    03-11-2024 @ 05:25 PM
    Ethnicity
    Unknown
    Country
    Antarctica
    Gender
    Posts
    3,910
    Thumbs Up/Down
    Received: 3,465/7
    Given: 1,535/1

    2 Not allowed! Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by rothaer View Post
    That I understand. My question aims at if kakъ and kъjь do have a common root. (And hence Shtokavian koji and Russian kakov (both means which) do not by chance have the same meaning, but by a common etymological root.)
    in IE languages interrogative pronouns generally begin with a H or K sound, that's the connection

  10. #30
    Veteran Member Apricity Funding Member
    "Friend of Apricity"

    rothaer's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2019
    Last Online
    @
    Ethnicity
    German
    Ancestry
    Eastern German
    Country
    Germany
    Gender
    Posts
    7,785
    Thumbs Up/Down
    Received: 8,377/56
    Given: 8,658/5

    0 Not allowed! Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Alenka View Post
    It's all vaguely related, but kakъ and kъjь are different root branches.
    There's also another third branch.
    Here's all three:
    - *jь, *čьjь, *jьnъ, *kъjь, *onъ, *ovъ, *sь, *tъ, *vьśь
    - *jakъ, *jьnakъ, *kakъ, *onakъ, *ovakъ, *sicь, *takъ, *vьśakъ
    - *koterъ, *jeterъ
    In general I know this with examples within Germanic languages. So this is how it works within living languages. But as the Slavic language family is notably younger (than the Germanic), I'm surprised by this range of branches' contents. What you say (the common root) must precede proto-Slavic if we define this with the language spoken per 500 AD, right? Even what you present to be within one branch seems to me very old. But who knows? I note this stunning o/p/k equivalent stated by your examples, but okay, this jezero / ozero equivalence I know myself and the to me (surprising) k / j equivalence (visible in your examples!) strongly supports kak and kaj to be the same!

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •