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History of the Russian Language

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History of the Russian language



 
 
The history proper of the Russian language
Russian language

Russian is the most geographically widespread language of Eurasia, the most widely spoken of the Slavic languages, and the largest native language in Europe....
 dates from just before the turn of the second millennium.

Note. In the following sections, all examples of vocabulary are given in their modern spelling.

o the 14th century, ancestors of the modern Russians (who likewise called themselves ruskiye) spoke dialects of the Old East Slavic language
Old East Slavic language

Old East Slavic, also known as Old Russian or Old Ruthenian, was a vernacular literary language used from the tenth to the fourteenth centuries by East Slavs in Kievan Rus' and states which formed after its collapse....
, related to those of other East Slavs
East Slavs

The East Slavs are a Slavs, the speakers of East Slavic languages. Formerly the main population of the medieval state of Kievan Rus, by the seventeenth century they evolved into the Russians, Ukrainians, Belarusians and Rusyns peoples....
.






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The history proper of the Russian language
Russian language

Russian is the most geographically widespread language of Eurasia, the most widely spoken of the Slavic languages, and the largest native language in Europe....
 dates from just before the turn of the second millennium.

Note. In the following sections, all examples of vocabulary are given in their modern spelling.

Historical development


Kievan period and feudal breakup


Beresta
Up to the 14th century, ancestors of the modern Russians (who likewise called themselves ruskiye) spoke dialects of the Old East Slavic language
Old East Slavic language

Old East Slavic, also known as Old Russian or Old Ruthenian, was a vernacular literary language used from the tenth to the fourteenth centuries by East Slavs in Kievan Rus' and states which formed after its collapse....
, related to those of other East Slavs
East Slavs

The East Slavs are a Slavs, the speakers of East Slavic languages. Formerly the main population of the medieval state of Kievan Rus, by the seventeenth century they evolved into the Russians, Ukrainians, Belarusians and Rusyns peoples....
. This spoken tongue and the literary Old Church Slavonic language were used throughout Kievan Rus. The earliest written record of the language is an amphora found at Gnezdovo
Gnezdovo

Gnezdovo or Gnyozdovo is an archeological site located near the types of inhabited localities in Russia of Gnyozdovo in Smolensk Oblast, Russia....
 and tentatively dated to the mid-10th century
10th century

The 10th century is the period from 901 to 1000 in accordance with the Julian calendar in the Christian Era/Common Era....
. Until 15th century Gnezdovo
Gnezdovo

Gnezdovo or Gnyozdovo is an archeological site located near the types of inhabited localities in Russia of Gnyozdovo in Smolensk Oblast, Russia....
 was a part of the independent Smolensk
Smolensk

Smolensk is a types of inhabited localities in Russia and the administrative centre of Smolensk Oblast, located on the Dnieper River. Situated west-southwest of Moscow, this walled city was destroyed several times throughout its long history since it was on the invasion routes of both Napoleon and Hitler....
 principality.

For the debate concerning derivation of the words Rus and Russia, see Etymology of Rus and derivatives and Rus' (people)
Rus' (people)

Rus? are the historic population of the medieval Rus' Khaganate and Kievan Rus' whose name survives in the cognates Russians, Rusyns, and Ruthenians, and who are viewed by the modern Belarusians, Russians, and Ukrainians as the predecessors of their own peoples....
. For the general history of the language and Old East Slavic literature, see Old East Slavic language
Old East Slavic language

Old East Slavic, also known as Old Russian or Old Ruthenian, was a vernacular literary language used from the tenth to the fourteenth centuries by East Slavs in Kievan Rus' and states which formed after its collapse....
.

During the pre-Kievan period, the main sources of borrowings were Germanic languages
Germanic languages

The Germanic languages are a group of related languages that constitute a branch of the Indo-European languages language family. The common ancestor of all the languages in this branch is Proto-Germanic, spoken in approximately the mid-1st millennium BC in Pre-Roman Iron Age....
, particularly Gothic
Gothic language

Gothic is an extinct language Germanic language that was spoken by the Goths. It is known primarily from Codex Argenteus, a 6th century copy of a 4th century Bible translation, and is the only East Germanic languages with a sizable corpus....
 and Old Norse. In the Kievan period, however, loanword
Loanword

A loanword is a word directly taken into one language from another with little or no translation. By contrast, a calque or loan translation is a related concept whereby it is the Meaning or idiom that is borrowed rather than the lexical item itself....
s and calque
Calque

In linguistics, a calque or loan translation is a word or phrase borrowed from another language by literal, word-for-word or root-for-root translation....
s entered the vernacular primarily from Old Church Slavonic
Old Church Slavonic

Old Church Slavonic, also known as Old Bulgarian, or Old Macedonian, was the first literary Slavic language, based on the old Solun dialect of the Thessaloniki region by the 9th century Byzantine Greeks missionaries, Saints Cyril and Methodius, who used it for translation of the Bible and other Ancient Greek language ecclesiastica...
 and from Byzantine
Byzantine Empire

Byzantine Empire and Eastern Roman Empire are conventional names used to describe the Roman Empire during the Middle Ages, centered on its capital of Constantinople....
 Greek
Greek language

Greek is an Indo-European languages native to the southern Balkan peninsula, the language of the Greek people. It forms an independent branch within Indo-European....
:

????????CS = ESl ????????'brief'
????????ESl = CS ??????? 'short'
??????????Gr biblioth?ke via OCS'library' (archaic form)
???????????? OCS ?????? =orthós 'correct',
OCS ?????? =grápho 'write'
'spelling, orthography'


After the Mongol invasion of Rus
Mongol invasion of Rus

The Mongol invasion of Rus' was heralded by the Battle of the Kalka River in 1223 between the Mongolian general Subutai's reconnaissance unit and the combined force of several Rus' princes....
 in the 12th century, the vernacular language of the conquered remained firmly Slavic. Altaic
Altaic languages

Altaic is a disputed language family that is generally held by its proponents to include the Turkic languages, Mongolic languages, Tungusic languages, Korean language, and Japonic languages language families ....
 borrowings in Russian relate mostly to commerce
Commerce

Commerce is a division of trade or production, costs, and pricing which deals with the Trade of goods and service from production, costs, and pricing to final consumer....
 and the military
Military

A military is an organization authorized by its nation to use force, usually including use of weapons, in defending its country by combating actual or Threat of force ....
:

????? Turk.-Altaic 'commercial goods'
?????? Turk.-Altaic 'horse'


In Russia, Church Slavonic which evolved from Old Church Slavonic
Old Church Slavonic

Old Church Slavonic, also known as Old Bulgarian, or Old Macedonian, was the first literary Slavic language, based on the old Solun dialect of the Thessaloniki region by the 9th century Byzantine Greeks missionaries, Saints Cyril and Methodius, who used it for translation of the Bible and other Ancient Greek language ecclesiastica...
 remained the literary language until the Petrine age, when its usage shrank drastically to biblical and liturgical texts. The legal acts and private letters had been, however, already written in pre-Petrine Muscovy in a less formal language, closely reflecting spoken Russian. The first Grammar of Russian Language was written by Vasily Adodurov in the 1740s, and a more influential one, by Mikhail Lomonosov
Mikhail Lomonosov

Mikhail Vasilyevich Lomonosov was a Russian polymath, scientist and writer, who made important contributions to literature, education, and science....
 in 1755.

The Moscow period (15th–17th centuries)

After the disestablishment of the "Tartar yoke
Golden Horde

The Golden Horde is a East-Slavic designation for the Mongol?later Turkic languages?Muslim khanate established in the western part of the Mongol Empire after the Mongol invasion of Rus' in the 1240s: present-day Russia, Ukraine, Moldova, Kazakhstan, and the Caucasus....
" (????????? ??? ) in the late fourteenth century, both the political centre and the predominant dialect in European Russia
Russia

Russia , or the Russian Federation , is a list of countries spanning more than one continent country extending over much of northern Eurasia....
 came to be based in Moscow
Moscow

Moscow is the capital and the largest types of inhabited localities in Russia of the Russian Federation. It is also the largest European cities and metropolitan areas, with the Moscow metropolitan area ranking among the largest urban areas in the world....
. A scientific consensus exists that Russian and Ruthenian
Ruthenian language

Ruthenian is a term used for the Variety of East Slavic language spoken in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and later in the East Slavic territories of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth....
 (the predecessor of Belarusian and Ukrainian) had definitely become distinct by this time at the latest (according to some linguists and historians, even earlier). The official language in Russia remained a kind of Church Slavonic until the close of the 18th century, but, despite attempts at standardization, as by Meletius Smotrytsky
Meletius Smotrytsky

Meletius Smotrytsky , n? Maksym Herasymovytch was a Ruthenian language linguist from Galicia , author and religious activist. Son of the famous Ukrainian religious and political activist Herasym Smotrytsky....
 c. 1620, its purity was by then strongly compromised by an incipient secular literature
Russian literature

This article is about literature from Russia. For the song by Max?mo Park, see Our Earthly Pleasures. Russian literature refers to the literature of Russia or its ?migr?s, and to the Russian language literature of several independent nations once a part of what was historically Russia or the Soviet Union....
. There was borrowing of vocabulary from Polish
Polish language

Polish , an official language of Poland, has the largest number of speakers of any West Slavic languages. Polish-speakers use the language in a uniform manner through most of Poland, and it has a regular orthography....
, and, through it, from German and other Western European languages. At the same time, a number of words of native (according to a general consensus among etymologists of Russian) coinage or adaptation appeared, at times replacing or supplementing the inherited Indo-European
Indo-European languages

The Indo-European languages are a Language family of several hundred related languages and dialects, including most major languages of Europe, the Iranian plateau , Central Asia and the Indian subcontinent ....
/Common Slavonic vocabulary.

???? 'eye'
?????? P kurta, from Lat curtus 'a short jacket'
?????? G Barchat 'velvet'


Much annalistic, hagiographic
Hagiography

Hagiography is the study of saints. A hagiography, from Greek ' and ' , refers literally to writings on the subject of such holy people, and specifically the biography of ecclesiastical and secular leaders....
, and poetic material survives from the early Muscovite period. Nonetheless, a significant amount of philosophic and secular literature is known to have been destroyed after being proclaimed heretical
Heresy

Heresy is an introduced change to some system of belief, especially a religion, that conflicts with the previously established canon of that belief....
.

The material following the election of the Romanov
Romanov

The House of Romanov was the second and last monarchy dynasty of Russia, which ruled the country from 1613 to 1917. From 1762 until the February Revolution of 1917, the Russian Empire was ruled for five generations by a line of the House of Oldenburg descended from the marriage of a Romanov grand duchess to the Duke of Holstein-Gottorp....
 dynasty in 1613 following the Time of Troubles
Time of Troubles

The Time of Troubles was a period of History of Russia comprising the years of interregnum between the death of the last Tsardom of Russia Tsar Feodor I of Russia of the Rurik Dynasty in 1598 and the establishment of the Romanov Dynasty in 1613....
 is rather more complete. Modern Russian literature is considered to have begun in the seventeenth century, with the autobiography of Avvakum
Avvakum

Avvakum Petrov was a Russian protopope of Kazan Cathedral, Moscow on Red Square who led the opposition to Patriarch Nikon's reforms of the Russian Orthodox Church....
 and a corpus of chronique scandaleuse short stories from Moscow.

Empire (18th–19th centuries)

Geometry 1708 Russian
The political reforms of Peter the Great
Peter I of Russia

Peter I the Great or Pyotr Alexeyevich Romanov ruled Russia and later the Russian Empire from until his death, jointly ruling before 1696 with his weak and sickly half-brother, Ivan V of Russia....
 were accompanied by a reform of the alphabet, and achieved their goal of secularization and Westernization
Westernization

Westernization or occidentalization is a process whereby Society come under or adopt the Western culture in such matters as industry, technology, law, politics, economics, lifestyle, diet , language, alphabet, religion or western culture....
. Blocks of specialized vocabulary were adopted from the languages of Western Europe
Western Europe

Western Europe refers to the countries in the western most half of Europe. This concept has had different meanings, political and cultural as well as geographical issues have influenced the area....
. Most of the modern naval vocabulary, for example, is of Dutch
Dutch language

Dutch is a West Germanic languages spoken by over 22 million people as a first language, and about 5 million people as a second language."1% of the EU population claims to speak Dutch well enough in order to have a conversation." Outside the European Union the number of second language speakers of Dutch is very small. Most native...
 origin. Latin
Latin

Latin is an Italic language, historically spoken in Latium and Ancient Rome. Through the Military history of the Roman Empire, Latin spread throughout the Mediterranean and a large part of Europe....
, French, and German words entered Russian for the intellectual categories of the Age of Enlightenment
Age of Enlightenment

The Age of Enlightenment or The Enlightenment is a term used to describe a time in Western philosophy and cultural life centered upon the eighteenth century, in which rationalism was advocated as the primary source and legitimacy for authority....
. Greek words already in the language through Church Slavonic were refashioned to reflect post-Renaissance
Renaissance

The Renaissance was a cultural movement that spanned roughly the 14th to the 17th century, beginning in Italy in the late Middle Ages and later spreading to the rest of Europe....
 European rather than Byzantine pronunciation. By 1800, a significant portion of the gentry spoke French, less often German, on an everyday basis.

????? D mast 'mast'
??????? G Interesse/Fr intérêt 'interest'
?????????? Gr biblioth?ke via Fr. bibliothèque 'library' (modern form)


At the same time, there began explicit attempts to fashion a modern literary language as a compromise between Church Slavonic, the native vernacular, and the style of Western Europe. The writers Lomonosov
Mikhail Lomonosov

Mikhail Vasilyevich Lomonosov was a Russian polymath, scientist and writer, who made important contributions to literature, education, and science....
, Derzhavin
Gavrila Romanovich Derzhavin

Gavriil Romanovich Derzhavin was the greatest Russian poet before Alexander Pushkin. Although his works are traditionally assigned to the literary Classicism, his best verse is full of antitheses and conflicting sounds in the way reminiscent of John Donne and other Metaphysical poets....
, and Karamzin
Nikolai Mikhailovich Karamzin

Nikolai Mikhailovich Karamzin a Russian author credited with reforming the Russian language. He is best remembered for his History of the Russian State, a 12-volume national history modelled after the works of Edward Gibbon....
 made notable efforts in this respect, but, as per the received notion, the final synthesis belongs to Pushkin and his contemporaries in the first third of the nineteenth century.

During the nineteenth century, the standard language assumed its modern form; literature flourished. Spurred perhaps by the so-called Slavophilism, some Westernisms fashionable during the eighteenth century now passed out of use (for example, ???????? > ?????? , 'victory'), and formerly vernacular or dialectal strata entered the literature as the "speech of the people". Borrowings of political, scientific and technical terminology continued. By about 1900, commerce
Commerce

Commerce is a division of trade or production, costs, and pricing which deals with the Trade of goods and service from production, costs, and pricing to final consumer....
 and fashion
Fashion

Fashion refers to the styles and customs prevalent at a given time. In its most common usage, "fashion" exemplifies the appearances of clothing, but the term encompasses more....
 ensured the first wave of mass adoptions from German, French and English.

????????? Intl/G Sozialismus 'socialism'
??????????? Intl/Lat constitutio 'constitution'
????????? Gr antinomía,
metathesis
'useless debate, argument or quarrel' (dead bookish term)
?????? E 'political rally'
??????????? pronunciation of is still heard) G Preiskurant/
Fr prix-courant
'price list'


Soviet period and beyond (20th century)

The political upheavals of the early twentieth century and the wholesale changes of political ideology gave written Russian its modern appearance after the spelling reform of 1918
Spelling reform

Many languages have undergone spelling reform, where a deliberate, often officially sanctioned or mandated, change to spelling takes place. Proposals for such reform are also common....
. Reformed spelling, the new political terminology, and the abandonment of the effusive formulae of politeness characteristic of the pre-Revolutionary upper classes prompted dire statements from members of the émigré intelligentsia that Russian was becoming debased. But the authoritarian nature of the regime, the system of schooling it provided from the 1930s, and not least the often unexpressed yearning among the literati for the former days ensured a fairly static maintenance of Russian into the 1980s. Though the language did evolve, it changed very gradually. Indeed, while literacy became nearly universal, dialectal differentiation declined, especially in the vocabulary: schooling and mass communications ensured a common denominator.

The 1964 proposed reform was related to the orthography
Russian orthography

Russian orthography is formally considered to encompass spelling and punctuation . Russian spelling, which is quite phonemic in practice, is a mix of the morphological and phonetic principles, with a few etymological or historic forms, and occasional grammatical differentiation....
. In that year the Orthographic commission of the Institute of the Russian language (Academy of Sciences of the USSR), headed by Viktor Vinogradov
Viktor Vinogradov

Viktor Vladimirovich Vinogradov was a Russian linguist and philologist who presided over Soviet linguistics after World War II.Vinogradov's teachers at the Petrograd Institute of History and Philology included Lev Shcherba and Aleksey Shakhmatov, but it was Charles Bally's ideas that influenced him most profoundly during his formative year...
, apart from the withdrawal of some spelling exceptions, suggested to:
  • leave one partitive soft sign
    Soft sign

    The soft sign is a letter of the Cyrillic alphabet. In Old Church Slavonic, it represented a short front vowel but in modern Slavic Cyrillic writing systems , it does not represent an individual sound, rather it indicates softening of the preceding consonant or just has a traditional orthographic usage with no phonetic meaning ....
  • always write "i
    I (Cyrillic)

    I or Y is a letter of almost all ancient and modern Cyrillic alphabets, representing typically , or . Small cursive Cyrillic ? looks like Latin u ....
    " after "tse
    Tse (Cyrillic)

    eading=Cyrillic letter Tse|Image=...
    "
  • write "o
    O (Cyrillic)

    O is a letter of the Cyrillic alphabet, representing the vowel word-initially and after hard consonants. In Russian language it may represent the sounds in unstressed positions, due to the phenomenon of akanye....
    " after "zhe
    Zhe (Cyrillic)

    eading=Cyrillic letter Zhe|Image=...
    ", "che
    Che (Cyrillic)

    Che or Cha is a letter of the Cyrillic alphabet. It represents the Voiceless postalveolar affricate . In Russian there is a small number of words where che is pronounced as ....
    ", "sha
    Sha

    eading=Cyrillic letter Sha|Image=...
    ", "shcha", "tse" if stressed
    Stress (linguistics)

    In linguistics, stress is the relative emphasis that may be given to certain syllables in a word. The term is also used for similar patterns of phonetic prominence inside syllables....
     or "ye
    Ye (Cyrillic)

    Ye, or E , is a letter of the Cyrillic alphabet. It looks exactly like the Latin letter E. In Bulgarian language, Macedonian language, Serbian language, and Ukrainian language, it is called E, and represents the vowel or ....
    " if no
  • not to write the soft sign after "zhe", "sha", "che", "shcha"
  • cancel the interchange in roots
    Root (linguistics)

    The root is the primary lexicology unit of a word, which carries the most significant aspects of semantics content and cannot be reduced into smaller constituents....
     -zar/-zor, -rast/-rost, -gar/-gor, -plav/-plov etc., cancel the double consonants in loan words
  • write only -yensk(iy) instead of two suffix
    Suffix

    In grammar, a suffix is an affix which is placed after the stem of a word. Common examples are case endings, which indicate the grammatical case of nouns or adjectives, and verb endings, which form the grammatical conjugation of verbs....
    es -insk(iy) and -yensk(iy), write only -yets instead of -yets or -its
  • simplify the spelling of "en
    En (Cyrillic)

    eading=Cyrillic letter En|Image=...
    " (en-en) in participle
    Participle

    In linguistics, a participle is a derivative of a non-finite verb verb, which can be used in compound Grammatical tense or Grammatical voice, or as a Grammatical modifier....
    s: write double "en" in prefixal participles and ordinary "en" in non-prefixal
  • always write with hyphen
    Hyphen

    A hyphen is a punctuation mark. It is used both to join words and also to separate syllables of a single word. It is often confused with the dash , which are longer and have different uses, and with the minus sign which is also longer....
     the "pol-" (half-) combinations with subsequent genitive of noun
    Noun

    In linguistics, a noun is a member of a large, open class lexical category whose members can occur as the main word in the subject of a clause, the object of a verb, or the object of a preposition....
     or ordinal number
    Ordinal number

    In set theory, an ordinal number, or just ordinal, is the order type of a well-order. They are usually identified with hereditarily transitive sets....
  • write the nouns beginning with vice-, Unter-, ex- together
  • write all particles
    Grammatical particle

    A particle, in grammar, is a function word that is not assignable to any of the traditional grammatical word classes . The term is a catch-all term for a heterogeneous set of elements and lacks a precise universal definition....
     separately
  • allow the optional spelling of noun inflexions
The reform however failed to be accomplished.

Political circumstances and the undoubted accomplishments of the superpower in military, scientific, and technological matters (especially cosmonautics), gave Russian a world-wide if occasionally grudging prestige, most strongly felt during the middle third of the twentieth century.

????????? R 'Bolshevik' (lit. 'adherent of the maximum programme',
after the events of the 1903 Party congress,
also taken as 'person of the majority'.)
???????? ???????????????? ???? ????????
'Communist Youth League'
?????? ??????? ?????????
lit. 'faculty for workers' (special preparatory courses of colleges and universities for workers)


The collapse of 1990–91 loosened the shackles. In the face of economic uncertainties and difficulties within the educational system, the language changed rapidly. Fashion for ways and things Western prompted a wave of adoptions, mostly from English, and sometimes for words with exact native equivalents.
???????????? E 'distributor' (in marketing)


At the same time, the growing public presence of the Russian Orthodox Church
Russian Orthodox Church

The Russian Orthodox Church ; or The Moscow Patriarchate , also known as the Orthodox Christian Church of Russia, is a body of Christianity who constitute an Autocephaly Eastern Orthodox Church under the jurisdiction of the List of Metropolitans and Patriarchs of Moscow, in full communion with the other Eastern Orthodox Churches....
 and public debate about the history of the nation gave new impetus to the most archaic Church Slavonic stratum of the language, and introduced or reintroduced words and concepts that replicate the linguistic models of the earliest period.

??????????????? CS ?????? =
R ??????? 'young',
R/CS ?????? = 'old man with spriritual wisdom'
term applied (in condemnation) by the Russian Orthodox Church
Russian Orthodox Church

The Russian Orthodox Church ; or The Moscow Patriarchate , also known as the Orthodox Christian Church of Russia, is a body of Christianity who constitute an Autocephaly Eastern Orthodox Church under the jurisdiction of the List of Metropolitans and Patriarchs of Moscow, in full communion with the other Eastern Orthodox Churches....
 to the phenomenon of immature newly-ordained priests assuming an unwarranted excessive control over the private life of the members of the congregation.


Russian today is a tongue in great flux. The new words entering the language and the emerging new styles of expression have, naturally, not been received with universal appreciation.

Examples


The following excerpts illustrate (very briefly) the development of the literary language. They have been chosen because they are to this day presented in Russian schools and universities as illuminations of linguistic and social history.

NOTE. The spelling has been partly modernized. The translations attempt to be as literal as possible; they are not literary.

Primary Chronicle
Primary Chronicle

The Primary Chronicle , or Russian Primary Chronicle, is a history of Kievan Rus' from about 850 to 1110, originally compiled in Kiev about 1113....

Povest Vremennykh Let Text
c. 1110, from the Laurentian Codex, 1377

.


These [are] the tales of the bygone years, whence is come the Russian land, who first began to rule at Kiev, and whence the Russian land has come about.


Early language; Russian, Ukrainian and Belarusian not yet fully differentiated. Fall of the yer
Yer

eading=Cyrillic letter Yer|Image=...
s in progress or arguably complete (several words end with a consonant; 'to rule' < , modern ???????). South-western (incipient Ukrainian
Ukrainian language

Ukrainian is a language of the East Slavic languages of the Slavic languages. It is the official language of Ukraine. In some areas of Russia there are dialects, Balachka or Surzhyk, which are the Ukrainianized versions of the Russian language....
) features include 'bygone'; modern R ?????????). Correct use of perfect
Perfect aspect

The perfect aspect is variously considered either an grammatical aspect or grammatical tense which calls a listener's attention to the consequences generated by an action, rather than the action itself....
 and aorist
Aorist

Aorist is an grammatical aspect or, used more specifically, a verb grammatical tense in some Indo-European languages such as Greek language. The term is also used for unrelated concepts in some other languages, such as Turkish language....
: ???? ????? 'is/has come' (modern R ?????), ???? 'began' (modern R ????? as a development of the old perfect tense.) Note the style of punctuation.

Song of Igor
The Tale of Igor's Campaign

The Tale of Igor's Campaign is an anonymous epic poem written in the Old East Slavic language and tentatively dated to the end of 12th century....

Slovo O Polku Igoreve Text
. c. 1200(?), from the Catherine manuscript, c. 1790.

.


Would it not be meet, o brothers, for us to begin with the old words the difficult telling of the host of Igor, Igor Sviatoslavich? And to begin in the way of the true tales of this time, and not in the way of Boyan's inventions. For the wise Boyan, if he wished to devote to someone [his] song, would wander like a squirrel over a tree, like a grey wolf over land, like a bluish eagle beneath the clouds.


Illustrates the sung epics
Epic poetry

An epic is a lengthy narrative poem, ordinarily concerning a serious subject containing details of heroic deeds and events significant to a culture or nation....
. Yers generally given full voicing, unlike in the first printed edition of 1800, which was copied from the same destroyed prototype as the Catherine manuscript. Typical use of metaphor and simile. The misquote ??????????? ?????? ?? ????? ('to effuse/pour out one's thought upon/over wood'; a product of an old and habitual misreading of the word ?????, 'squirrel-like' as ??????, 'thought-like', and a change in the meaning of the word ????) has become proverbial in the meaning 'to speak ornately, at length, excessively'.

Avvakum
Avvakum

Avvakum Petrov was a Russian protopope of Kazan Cathedral, Moscow on Red Square who led the opposition to Patriarch Nikon's reforms of the Russian Orthodox Church....
's autobiography

1672–73. Modernized spelling.

???? ??????? ???? ? ?????? ? ????? ? ??????. ? ?????? ??????? ????? ?????, ???? ????? ????? ????????, ????? ????? ????? ????????. ??????????? ???????? ??????; ??????? ? ?????? ? ??????? ?? ?????????; ??? ?????? ????? ?????? ? ?????????? ??????? ???????? ? ????? ? ?????? ???????? ????.


And then they sent me to Siberia with my wife and children. Whatever hardship there was on the way, there's too much to say it all, but maybe a small part to be mentioned. [My wife] (lit, the archpriest's wife) gave birth to a baby; and we carted her, sick, all the way to Tobolsk; for three thousand versts, around thirteen weeks in all, we dragged [her] by cart, and by water, and in a sleigh half of the way.


Pure seventeenth-century central Russian vernacular. Phonetic spelling (???? ????? 'it all, all of that', modern ???? ?????). A few archaisms still used (aorist in the perfective aspect ????? 'was'). Note the way of transport to exile.

Alexandr Pushkin

From "Winter Evening" (?????? ?????), 1825. Modern spelling.

???? ????? ???? ?????,
????? ??????? ?????;
??, ??? ?????, ??? ??????,
?? ????????, ??? ????,
?? ?? ?????? ??????????
????? ??????? ???????,
??, ??? ?????? ??????????,
? ??? ? ?????? ????????.


Tempest covers sky in haze[s],
Twisting gales full of snow;
Like a beast begins to howl,
A cry, as if a child, it will let go,
On the worn-out roof it will clamour
Suddenly upon the thatch,
Or as though a traveller tardy
Starts to knock upon our hatch. (lit., window)


Modern Russian is sometimes said to begin with Pushkin, in the sense that the old "high style" Church Slavonic and vernacular Russian are so closely fused that it is difficult to identify whether any given word or phrase stems from the one or the other.

Fyodor Dostoevsky

From Crime and Punishment
Crime and Punishment

Crime and Punishment is a novel by Russian literature Fyodor Dostoevsky that was first published in the literary journal The Russian Messenger in twelve monthly installments in 1866....
 (???????????? ? ?????????), 1866. Modern spelling.

? ?????? ????, ? ??????????? ?????? ?????, ??? ?????, ???? ??????? ??????? ????? ?? ????? ???????, ??????? ??????? ?? ??????? ? ?-? ????????, ?? ????? ? ????????, ??? ?? ? ???????????, ?????????? ? ?-?? ?????.


In early July, during a spell of extraordinary heat, towards evening, a young man went out from his garret, which he sublet in S—— Lane, [entered] the street, and slowly, as though in [the grip of] indecision, began to make his way to K—— Bridge.


Nineteenth century prose. No archaisms. "European" syntax.

Fundamental laws of the Russian Empire
Russian Empire

File:Russian Emperor Flag.jpgFile:Romanov Flag.svgThe Russian Empire was a state that existed from 1721 until the Russian Revolution of 1917....

???????? ?????? ?????????? ??????? (Constitution of the Russian Empire), 1906. Modern spelling.

?????????? ?????????????? ??????????? ????????? ????????????? ??????. ???????????? ?????? ??? ?? ?????? ?? ?????, ?? ? ?? ??????? ??? ??? ??????????.


To the Emperor of all Russia belongs the Supreme Autocratic Power. To obey His power, not merely in fear but also in conscience, God Himself does ordain.


Illustrates the categorical nature of thought and expression in the official circles of the Russian Empire. Exemplifies the syntactic distribution of emphasis.

Mikhail Bulgakov
Mikhail Bulgakov

Mikhail Afanasyevich Bulgakov was a Russian novelist and playwright active in the first half of the 20th century. He is best known for the novel The Master and Margarita, which The Times has called one of the masterpieces of the 20th century....

From The Master and Margarita
The Master and Margarita

The Master and Margarita is a novel by Mikhail Bulgakov, woven around the premise of a visit by the Devil to the fervently atheism Soviet Union....
 (?????? ? ?????????), 1930–40

?? ?????? ???? ??????? ????????????? ??? ??????, ??? ?? ????????? ?????? ????? ? ???????? ????????????, ?? ???????????? ? ???? ? ?????? ? ???????. ??? ??????? ???????? ???, ? ??????????? ???? ??????, ???? ??? ? ?????? ??????????????? ?????? ?????? ??????, ? ???, ??? ???? ?????? ? ??????? ? ?????????. ???????, ???? ??? ?????? ????? ???? ??????. ???? ????? ??? ? ?????, ???????? ??????? ??????? ????? ???? ?? ??? ????. ?? ???????? ?? ???!


You have always been a passionate proponent of the theory that upon decapitation human life comes to an end, the human being transforms into ashes, and passes into oblivion. I am pleased to inform you, in the presence of my guests, though they serve as a proof for another theory altogether, that your theory is both well-grounded and ingenious. Mind you, all theories are worth one another. Among them is one, according to which every one shall receive in line with his faith. May that come to be!


An example of highly educated modern speech (this excerpt is spoken by Woland
Woland

Woland or Voland is a character in the book The Master and Margarita by the Russian author Mikhail Bulgakov....
). See Russian humor for the essential other end of the spectrum.

Literature

  • Kiparsky, Valentin, Russische Historische Grammatik, 3 vols., 1963, 1967, 1975.
  • Max Vasmer
    Max Vasmer

    Max Vasmer was a Russian-born Germany linguistics who studied problems of etymology of Indo-European languages, Finno-Ugric languages and Turkic languages and worked on history of Slavic, Baltic, Iranian, and Finno-Ugric peoples....
    : Etymological dictionary of the Russian language (Russisches Etymologisches Wörterbuch, 4 volumes, Heidelberg
    Heidelberg

    Heidelberg is a city in Baden-W?rttemberg, Germany. As of 2006, over 140,000 people live within the city's area. The town of Heidelberg is an administrative district of its own....
    , 1950-58
    1958

    Year 1958 was a common year starting on Wednesday of the Gregorian calendar....
    ; Russian
    Russian language

    Russian is the most geographically widespread language of Eurasia, the most widely spoken of the Slavic languages, and the largest native language in Europe....
     translation 1964-73
    1973

    1973 was a common year starting on Monday of the 1973 Gregorian calendar....
    ).
  • Terence Wade, Russian etymological dictionary, Duckworth Publishing, 1996 - ISBN 1-85399-414-6
  • Alexander G. Preobrazhensky, Etymological dictionary of the Russian language, Columbia University Press, 1983 - ISBN 0-231-01889-4
  • Serguei Sakhno, Dictionnaire russe-français d'étymologie comparée: correspondences lexicales historiques - ISBN 2-7475-0219-8
  • Paul Clemens and Elena Chapovalova, Les mots Russes par la racine (Essai de vocabulaire Russe contemporain par l'étymologie)- ISBN 2-7475-2833-2


See also

  • Russian language
    Russian language

    Russian is the most geographically widespread language of Eurasia, the most widely spoken of the Slavic languages, and the largest native language in Europe....
  • Old East Slavic language
    Old East Slavic language

    Old East Slavic, also known as Old Russian or Old Ruthenian, was a vernacular literary language used from the tenth to the fourteenth centuries by East Slavs in Kievan Rus' and states which formed after its collapse....
  • Russian alphabet
    Russian alphabet

    The modern Russian alphabet is a variant of the Cyrillic alphabet. It was introduced into Kievan Rus' at the time of Vladimir I of Kiev's conversion to Christianity date....
  • Russian grammar
    Russian grammar

    Russian grammar encompasses:* a highly Synthetic language morphology* a syntax that, for the literary language, is the conscious fusion of three elements:...
  • Russian orthography
    Russian orthography

    Russian orthography is formally considered to encompass spelling and punctuation . Russian spelling, which is quite phonemic in practice, is a mix of the morphological and phonetic principles, with a few etymological or historic forms, and occasional grammatical differentiation....
  • Reforms of Russian orthography
    Reforms of Russian orthography

    The Old Russian language adopted the Cyrillic alphabet, approximately during the tenth century and at about the same time as the introduction of Eastern Christianity into the territories inhabited by the Eastern Slavs....
  • Russian phonology
    Russian phonology

    For assistance in making phonetic transcriptions of Russian for Wikipedia articles, see WP:IPA for RussianThis article discusses the phonology system of standard language Russian language based on the Moscow dialect ....
  • Russian etymology


External links