| |
| | Abstracts of Papers |
 | | The patterns of segmentation in these two sources allow the classes of proclitics and enclitics to be clearly established with some innovative tendencies, provide plausible evidence for primary and secondary stresses in a range of compound words, and suggest that the traditional prosodic category of “enclinomena” was no longer clearly distinct. |
 | | This paper concerns patron saints of the Kievan princes: Olga-Helena, Vladimir I-Basil, Svyatopolk (Okaiannyj)-possibly Peter, Yaroslav (the Wise)-George, Izyaslav-Dimitri, Svyatoslav-Nicholas, Vsevolod-Andrew, Svyatopolk II-Michael, Vladimir II Monomakh-Basil, Mstislav-Harald-Theodore, Yaropolk II-possibly John. |
 | | Although they gained a wide following among the East Slavs very early, their Rus and Byzantine cults were far from identical, as the princes of Rus seem to have been much more devoted to the saints as warriors than as martyrs. |
| userweb.port.ac.uk /~cleminsr/abstract.htm (39 words) |
|