Loading…
Academic Journal
Dudika, Negvar: Two German Anthroponyms in Texts from Novgorod
Alexander V. Nazarenko
Slovene, Vol 4, Iss 1 (2015)
Saved in:
Title | Dudika, Negvar: Two German Anthroponyms in Texts from Novgorod |
---|---|
Authors | Alexander V. Nazarenko |
Publication Year |
2015
|
Source |
Slovene, Vol 4, Iss 1 (2015)
|
Description |
According to the Novgorod First Chronicle (in entries from 1055 and 1058), a servant (xolopъ) and probably steward (tiunъ) of the Novgorodian bishop Luka had the name Dudika. The name seems to be of Lower German origin ( old Russian rob-, a virtual form like the Old Russian *Nigvarъ might have appeared. The further transformation *Nigvarъ > Negvar was induced by frequent personal name models either with the initial group Ne- (such as Nedanъ, Nevidъ) or with the first stem Něg- (such as Něgoradъ). So the Old Scandinavian Ingvarr was reflected as a loan-name in the Old Russian dialects three times: Igorь (before losing the nasal vowels), Inъgvarъ, and Negvarъ (before and after losing the reduced vowels in unaccented positions).
|
Document Type |
article
|
Language |
Bulgarian
German English Croatian Russian |
Publisher Information |
Moscow State University of Education, 2015.
|
Subject Terms | |