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Beskrivning
Professor György Kara, an outstanding member of academia, celebrated his 80th birthday recently. His students and colleagues commemorate this occasion with papers on a wide range of topics in Altaic Studies, with a focus on the literacy, culture and languages of the steppe civilizations.
Ákos Bertalan Apatóczky, Ph.D. (1974), Károli University Budapest, is an Associate Professor at that university. A specialist of Chinese bilingual works he published monographs and numerous articles including those on Yiyu (Global Oriental, 2009) and the "Translation chapter" of the Lulongsai lüe (Brill, 2016). Christopher P. Atwood, Ph.D. (1964), is Professor in the East Asian Languages and Civilizations Department at the University of Pennsylvania. His works include Young Mongols and Vigilantes in Inner Mongolia's Interregnum Decades (2002), and Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire (2004). Béla Kempf, Ph.D. (1976), University of Szeged, is a subject librarian of the Oriental Collection, Klebelsberg Library and a specialist in Mongolic historical linguistics.
Innehållsförteckning
ForewordPrefaceList of Figures and Tables1 The Yibu (譯部) Chapter of the Lulongsai lüe (盧龍塞略)Ákos Bertalan Apatóczky2 Middle Turkic Dialects as Seen in Chinese Transcriptions from the Mongol Yuan EraChristopher P. Atwood3 The Scent of a Woman: Allegorical Misogyny in a Sa skya pa Treatise on Salvation in Pre-Classical Mongolian VerseBrian Baumann4 Some Aspects of the Language Usage of Darkhat and Oirat Female ShamansÁgnes Birtalan5 Some Remarks on Page Fragments of a Mongol Book of Taoist Content from QaraqotaOtgon Borjigin6 Pronouns and Other Terms of Address in Khalkha MongolianBenjamin Brosig7 Past Tenses, Diminutives and Expressive Palatalization: Typology and the Limits of Internal Reconstruction in TungusicJosé Andrés Alonso de la Fuente8 From Tatar to Magyar: Notes on Central Eurasian Ethnonyms in -rJuha Janhunen9 A Mongolian Text of ConfessionOlivér Kápolnás and Alice Sárközi10 The Role of Ewenki VgV in Mongolic ReconstructionsBayarma Khabtagaeva11 Contraction, anticipation et persévération en mongol xalx : quelques réflexionsJacques Legrand12 The Dongxiang (Santa) Ending -ğuŋ and Its AlliesHans Nugteren13 Sino-Mongolica in the Qırġız Epic Poem Kökötöy’s Memorial Feast by Saġımbay Orozbaq uuluDaniel Prior14 BadəkšaanElisabetta Ragagnin15 Kollektaneen zum Uigurischen Wörterbuch: Zwei Weisheiten und Drei Naturen im Uigurischen BuddhismusVon Klaus Röhrborn16 Some Medical and Related Terms in Middle MongɣolVolker Rybatzki17 Reflexes of the *VgV and *VxV Groups in the Mongol Vocabulary of the Sino-Mongol Glossary Dada yu/Beilu yiyu (Late 16th–Early 17th Cent.)Pavel Rykin18 Early Serbi-Mongolic—Tungusic Lexical Contact: Jurchen Numerals from the 室韋 Shirwi (Shih-wei) in North ChinaAndrew Shimunek19 On the Phenomeno-Logic behind some Mongolian VerbsInes Stolpe and Alimaa Senderjav20 Spelling Variation in Cornelius Rahmn’s Kalmuck Manuscripts as Evidence for Sound ChangesJan-Olof Svantesson21 Four Tungusic EtymologiesAlexander Vovin22 Zum Werktitel mongolischer Texte seit dem 17. JahrhundertMichael Weiers23 The Last-Words of Xiao Chala Xianggong in Khitan ScriptWu Yingzhe24 Proper Names in the Oirat Translation of “The Sutra of Golden Light”Natalia YakhontovaTabula gratulatoriaIndex