Dictionarium quatuor linguarum

Summary

Dictionarium quatuor linguarum[notes 1] (The Dictionary of Four Languages) is a 16th-century book by the German polymath Hieronymus Megiser that includes a multilingual dictionary and a multilingual grammar of Italian, Slovene, German,[2] and Latin. It also includes some Croatian words.[3] It was compiled and published in 1592 in Graz (Austria), then part of the Habsburg monarchy. The dictionary is the first multilingual dictionary of Slovene. The appendix, named Exempla aliquot declinationum et coniugationium (Some examples of declensions and conjugations) contains some grammar of the included languages and has been recognised as the second grammar of Slovene and the first multilingual grammar that includes Slovene.[4] The book marks the beginning of Slovene lexicography.[5] An extended edition was published under the same title in 1744 at Klagenfurt (Austria) by the Jesuits. This second edition also contains example phrases in German and Slovene, illustrating the use of the entries given. The number of Slovene equivalents in this edition is notably higher; they often reflect Carinthian Slovene.

Dictionarium quatuor linguarum (1592). Front page.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Full name: Dictionarium quatuor linguarum videlicet, Germanicae, Latinae, Illyricae, (quae vulgo Sclavonica appellatur) & Italicae, sive Hetruscae.[1]

References edit

  1. ^ "Dictionarium quatuor linguarum videlicet, Germanicae, Latinae, Illyricae, (quae vulgo Sclavonica appellatur) & Italicae, sive Hetruscae". Digital Library of Slovenia (dLib.si). Ljubljana: National and University Library (NUK).
  2. ^ For information on Bavarian characteristics of the German entries see Bergmann, Hubert: Beobachtungen zu Megisers "Dictionarium quatuor linguarum" von 1592 bzw. 1744 aus Sicht der bairischen Dialektlexikographie. In: Bergmann, Hubert et al. (eds.): Fokus Dialekt. Analysieren – Dokumentieren – Kommunizieren. Festschrift für Ingeborg Geyer zum 60. Geburtstag. Hildesheim et al. 2010 (= Germanistische Linguistik 199-201)
  3. ^ Google knjige Edward Stankiewicz: Grammars and dictionaries of the Slavic languages from the Middle Ages up to 1850, Mouton, 1984., ISBN 3-11-009778-8
  4. ^ "Primeri nekaj sklanjatev in spregatev v Megiserjevem Dictionarium quatuor linguarum 1592" [The Concise Grammar of Four Languages in Megiser’s 1592 Dictionary]. Jezikoslovni Zapiski (in Slovenian and English). 13 (1/2). Inštitut za slovenski jezik Frana Ramovša, ZRC SAZU: 23–32. 2007. ISSN 0354-0448. COBISS 26967085.
  5. ^ Hriberšek, Matej (2008). Jesenšek, Marko (ed.). "Slovaropisje klasičnih jezikov na Slovenskem v 16. stoletju" [Lexicography of Classical Languages in the Slovene Lands in the 16th Century] (PDF). Slavia Centralis (SCN) (in Slovenian). I (2). Department of Slavic languages and Literatures, Faculty of Arts, University of Maribor: 77–87. ISSN 1855-6302.[permanent dead link]

External links edit

  • Dictionarum quatuor linguarum. Full digitised version. Det Kongelige Bibliotek [Royal Danish Library], Copenhagen. Retrieved 20 March 2012.