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Azov Greek in a typological perspective. / Kisilier, Maxim .

Proceedings of the 5th Patras international conference of graduate students in linguistics. ed. / Andreea Madalina Balas; Sophia Giannopoulou; Angeliki Zagoura. Patras : University of Patras, 2019. p. 34-47.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Kisilier, M 2019, Azov Greek in a typological perspective. in A Madalina Balas, S Giannopoulou & A Zagoura (eds), Proceedings of the 5th Patras international conference of graduate students in linguistics. University of Patras, Patras, pp. 34-47, 5th Patras International Conference of Graduate students in Linguistics
, Patras, Greece, 27/05/19. <https://docs.wixstatic.com/ugd/69b6b1_13334a5abde14258abecb06fa588cc3e.pdf>

APA

Kisilier, M. (2019). Azov Greek in a typological perspective. In A. Madalina Balas, S. Giannopoulou, & A. Zagoura (Eds.), Proceedings of the 5th Patras international conference of graduate students in linguistics (pp. 34-47). University of Patras. https://docs.wixstatic.com/ugd/69b6b1_13334a5abde14258abecb06fa588cc3e.pdf

Vancouver

Kisilier M. Azov Greek in a typological perspective. In Madalina Balas A, Giannopoulou S, Zagoura A, editors, Proceedings of the 5th Patras international conference of graduate students in linguistics. Patras: University of Patras. 2019. p. 34-47

Author

Kisilier, Maxim . / Azov Greek in a typological perspective. Proceedings of the 5th Patras international conference of graduate students in linguistics. editor / Andreea Madalina Balas ; Sophia Giannopoulou ; Angeliki Zagoura. Patras : University of Patras, 2019. pp. 34-47

BibTeX

@inproceedings{6ca37cd19fa3496bb15f092209e5579b,
title = "Azov Greek in a typological perspective",
abstract = "Greek settlers came to the Azov Sea region from the Crimea in the late 18th century. They founded the city of Mariupol and numerous villages around it. In the Crimea, urban Greeks spoke Greek-Tatar (so-called Urum), a dialect of Crimean Tatar, while Greeks from the villages could speak both Urum and their native Greek dialect Rum{\'e}jka. There were Urum and Rum{\'e}jka speakers among the migrants to the Azov Sea region. It seems that they never lived together in the Crimea, and they kept this tradition after they moved to the Azov Sea as well.Greek dialect of the Azov Sea region (Rum{\'e}jka or Azov Greek) gathered much attention both from Russian/Soviet and European (mostly German and Greek) scholars.Perhaps, the most discussed problem was the origin of Rum{\'e}jka. There are two wellknown hypotheses that usually migrate from paper to paper when Rum{\'e}jka is mentioned: this dialect is considered either a Pontic or a Northern Greek one.The main goal of this paper is to demonstrate that Rum{\'e}jka should be described from a typological point of view and may be easily compared with other Modern Greek dialects. There is no doubt that Azov Greek will provide valuable information forlinguistic cartography and classification of Modern Greek dialects. This paper is based on field research data which were collected in various Greek-speaking villages around the city of Mariupol (Ukraine) in 2003–2005.",
keywords = "новогреческая диалектология, Новогреческие диалекты, диалект приазовских греков, румейский язык, приазовские греки, новогреческая диалектология, Новогреческие диалекты, новогреческие исследования, диалект приазовских греков, румейский язык, приазовские греки, Приазовье, диалектология, полевые исследования",
author = "Maxim Kisilier",
year = "2019",
language = "English",
pages = "34--47",
editor = "{Madalina Balas}, Andreea and Sophia Giannopoulou and Angeliki Zagoura",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 5th Patras international conference of graduate students in linguistics",
publisher = "University of Patras",
address = "Greece",
note = "5th Patras International Conference of Graduate students in Linguistics<br/>, PICGL5 ; Conference date: 27-05-2019 Through 29-05-2019",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Azov Greek in a typological perspective

AU - Kisilier, Maxim

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Greek settlers came to the Azov Sea region from the Crimea in the late 18th century. They founded the city of Mariupol and numerous villages around it. In the Crimea, urban Greeks spoke Greek-Tatar (so-called Urum), a dialect of Crimean Tatar, while Greeks from the villages could speak both Urum and their native Greek dialect Ruméjka. There were Urum and Ruméjka speakers among the migrants to the Azov Sea region. It seems that they never lived together in the Crimea, and they kept this tradition after they moved to the Azov Sea as well.Greek dialect of the Azov Sea region (Ruméjka or Azov Greek) gathered much attention both from Russian/Soviet and European (mostly German and Greek) scholars.Perhaps, the most discussed problem was the origin of Ruméjka. There are two wellknown hypotheses that usually migrate from paper to paper when Ruméjka is mentioned: this dialect is considered either a Pontic or a Northern Greek one.The main goal of this paper is to demonstrate that Ruméjka should be described from a typological point of view and may be easily compared with other Modern Greek dialects. There is no doubt that Azov Greek will provide valuable information forlinguistic cartography and classification of Modern Greek dialects. This paper is based on field research data which were collected in various Greek-speaking villages around the city of Mariupol (Ukraine) in 2003–2005.

AB - Greek settlers came to the Azov Sea region from the Crimea in the late 18th century. They founded the city of Mariupol and numerous villages around it. In the Crimea, urban Greeks spoke Greek-Tatar (so-called Urum), a dialect of Crimean Tatar, while Greeks from the villages could speak both Urum and their native Greek dialect Ruméjka. There were Urum and Ruméjka speakers among the migrants to the Azov Sea region. It seems that they never lived together in the Crimea, and they kept this tradition after they moved to the Azov Sea as well.Greek dialect of the Azov Sea region (Ruméjka or Azov Greek) gathered much attention both from Russian/Soviet and European (mostly German and Greek) scholars.Perhaps, the most discussed problem was the origin of Ruméjka. There are two wellknown hypotheses that usually migrate from paper to paper when Ruméjka is mentioned: this dialect is considered either a Pontic or a Northern Greek one.The main goal of this paper is to demonstrate that Ruméjka should be described from a typological point of view and may be easily compared with other Modern Greek dialects. There is no doubt that Azov Greek will provide valuable information forlinguistic cartography and classification of Modern Greek dialects. This paper is based on field research data which were collected in various Greek-speaking villages around the city of Mariupol (Ukraine) in 2003–2005.

KW - новогреческая диалектология

KW - Новогреческие диалекты

KW - диалект приазовских греков

KW - румейский язык

KW - приазовские греки

KW - новогреческая диалектология

KW - Новогреческие диалекты

KW - новогреческие исследования

KW - диалект приазовских греков

KW - румейский язык

KW - приазовские греки

KW - Приазовье

KW - диалектология

KW - полевые исследования

UR - https://13090d2d-5e38-4d98-93e7-47a01aa1c4b4.filesusr.com/ugd/69b6b1_4620835886584739be91446b926becda.pdf

UR - https://picgl5.wixsite.com/picgl5/proceedings-praktika

M3 - Conference contribution

SP - 34

EP - 47

BT - Proceedings of the 5th Patras international conference of graduate students in linguistics

A2 - Madalina Balas, Andreea

A2 - Giannopoulou, Sophia

A2 - Zagoura, Angeliki

PB - University of Patras

CY - Patras

T2 - 5th Patras International Conference of Graduate students in Linguistics<br/>

Y2 - 27 May 2019 through 29 May 2019

ER -

ID: 47709341