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1

Winkler, Gundhild. "Die Ortsnamen auf -leben." Universitätsbibliothek Leipzig, 2014. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:15-qucosa-145281.

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The paper deals with the German place name type of -leben and tries to give new insights to the discussion about these names using the method of typological analysis. With the classification of the personal names within the -leben names, a new typology will be designed and the subtype bipartide personal name plus primary word -leben will be represented. The analysis gives a survey of the contained root of the personal name and shows the preference and also the absence of specific name elements within the different distribution areas Unstrut- and Bodekreis. The presented analysis is completed and illustrated with a map.
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2

Pohl, Heinz-Dieter. "164 Kärntner Ortschaften." Universitätsbibliothek Leipzig, 2014. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:15-qucosa-145443.

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This contribution presents the 164 villages (including one small town) which are to be equiped with bilingual "place name signs" according to 2011 amendment to the "Ethnic Group Act" (1976) on the basis of article 7 paragraph 3 of the Austrian "State Treaty" (1955), in which is provided, that the topographical terminology and inscriptions in the bilingual Carinthian districts shall be in the Slovene language as well as in German. Every village is presented with his German and Slovenian name including etymology and typological remarks.
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3

Fastnacht, Dorothea. "Der Ortsname Hundshaupten." Universitätsbibliothek Leipzig, 2014. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:15-qucosa-146271.

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4

Dräger, Kathrin. "Groß-Zimmern, Groß Grönau, Großopitz: zur Zusammenfügung von Siedlungsnamen mit unterscheidenden Zusätzen." Gesellschaft für Namenkunde e.V, 2013. https://ul.qucosa.de/id/qucosa%3A12840.

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To date, toponomastic surveys in the German speech area were mainly etymological. Now, a recently engineered prototype of a cartographic programme provides new possibilities for analyzing settlement names in Germany to follow morphological, phonological, and graphematical questions. This paper aims at illustrating the benefit of this programme by the example of settlement names with differing addendums. They can be written with hyphen (e. g., Groß-Zimmern), with space (Groß Grönau), or in compound spelling (Großopitz). Unexpectedly clear regional preferences for these types of spelling appeared: Settlement names with space are found in Northern Germany, whereas the compound spelling is preferentially used in the South. In Hessen and Rheinhessen, the writing with hyphen is predominant. These conventions of spelling must have developed during the last 200 years.
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5

Hengst, Karlheinz. "Der Name Leipzig als Hinweis auf Gegend mit Wasserreichtum." Universitätsbibliothek Leipzig, 2014. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:15-qucosa-145209.

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The article continues to discuss the origins and the history of the Saxon place name Leipzig. Several questions are under scrutiny. Starting out from recent research which gives the oldest historical evidence of the place name Leipzig as Lib-, it deals with certain new doubts regarding explanations that try to date the origins of the place name in pre-monolingual times. The question whether one can assume an original Slavonic form to the Slavonic root *lib- is dealt with in detail. The results of this discourse are: Today’s research cannot give a satisfactory explanation that the primary place name is derived from Slavonic. Furthermore, the hypothesis of an existing pre-monolingual form is newly evaluated. In this regard also the formerly existing geographical setting of the area around Leipzig is considered as the deciding motive in naming the place.
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6

Dräger, Kathrin. "Groß-Zimmern, Groß Grönau, Großopitz." Universitätsbibliothek Leipzig, 2014. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:15-qucosa-150730.

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Abstract:
To date, toponomastic surveys in the German speech area were mainly etymological. Now, a recently engineered prototype of a cartographic programme provides new possibilities for analyzing settlement names in Germany to follow morphological, phonological, and graphematical questions. This paper aims at illustrating the benefit of this programme by the example of settlement names with differing addendums. They can be written with hyphen (e. g., Groß-Zimmern), with space (Groß Grönau), or in compound spelling (Großopitz). Unexpectedly clear regional preferences for these types of spelling appeared: Settlement names with space are found in Northern Germany, whereas the compound spelling is preferentially used in the South. In Hessen and Rheinhessen, the writing with hyphen is predominant. These conventions of spelling must have developed during the last 200 years.
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7

Fähnrich, Heinz. "Von Baumnamen abgeleitete georgische Siedlungsnamen." Gesellschaft für Namenkunde e.V, 2010. https://ul.qucosa.de/id/qucosa%3A12565.

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Aus dem gedrängten Überblick geht hervor, dass der Benennung von Siedlungen oft georgische Baumbezeichnungen zugrunde liegen, die unterschiedlicher Herkunft sind. Diejenigen Bezeichnungen, die offenbar kartwelischen Ursprungs sind, bilden drei Gruppen: 1. solche, die sich für die kartwelische Grundsprache rekonstruieren lassen (d. h. wo auch swanische Entsprechungen vorliegen), 2. solche, die bis auf die jüngere georgisch-sanische Grundsprache zurückgehen, und 3. nur in der georgischen Sprache belegbare Bezeichnungen, für die sich kein regelmäßig entsprechendes Material der anderen Kartwelsprachen beibringen lässt. Hinzu kommen jene georgischen Baumbezeichnungen, die aus anderen Sprachen entlehnt worden sind. Der Vergleich der georgischen Baumnamen mit der betreffenden Lexik der anderen Kartwelsprachen und mit den rekonstruierten Grundformen zeigt, dass bei der Entstehung der georgischen Oikonyme die Aufspaltung der kartwelischen Grundsprache in die heutigen Einzelsprachen bereits abgeschlossen war. Zu der gleichen Folgerung führt die Einbeziehung jener Oikonyme, die auf Lehnwörtern fußen, die nur im Georgischen (aber nicht im Mingrelischen, Lasischen und Swanischen) vertreten sind.
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8

Fähnrich, Heinz. "Von Baumnamen abgeleitete georgische Siedlungsnamen." Universitätsbibliothek Leipzig, 2014. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:15-qucosa-145543.

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Abstract:
Aus dem gedrängten Überblick geht hervor, dass der Benennung von Siedlungen oft georgische Baumbezeichnungen zugrunde liegen, die unterschiedlicher Herkunft sind. Diejenigen Bezeichnungen, die offenbar kartwelischen Ursprungs sind, bilden drei Gruppen: 1. solche, die sich für die kartwelische Grundsprache rekonstruieren lassen (d. h. wo auch swanische Entsprechungen vorliegen), 2. solche, die bis auf die jüngere georgisch-sanische Grundsprache zurückgehen, und 3. nur in der georgischen Sprache belegbare Bezeichnungen, für die sich kein regelmäßig entsprechendes Material der anderen Kartwelsprachen beibringen lässt. Hinzu kommen jene georgischen Baumbezeichnungen, die aus anderen Sprachen entlehnt worden sind. Der Vergleich der georgischen Baumnamen mit der betreffenden Lexik der anderen Kartwelsprachen und mit den rekonstruierten Grundformen zeigt, dass bei der Entstehung der georgischen Oikonyme die Aufspaltung der kartwelischen Grundsprache in die heutigen Einzelsprachen bereits abgeschlossen war. Zu der gleichen Folgerung führt die Einbeziehung jener Oikonyme, die auf Lehnwörtern fußen, die nur im Georgischen (aber nicht im Mingrelischen, Lasischen und Swanischen) vertreten sind.
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9

Winkler, Gundhild. "Die Ortsnamen auf -leben: Versuch einer Typologie und Analyse." Gesellschaft für Namenkunde e.V, 2009. https://ul.qucosa.de/id/qucosa%3A12540.

Full text
Abstract:
The paper deals with the German place name type of -leben and tries to give new insights to the discussion about these names using the method of typological analysis. With the classification of the personal names within the -leben names, a new typology will be designed and the subtype bipartide personal name plus primary word -leben will be represented. The analysis gives a survey of the contained root of the personal name and shows the preference and also the absence of specific name elements within the different distribution areas Unstrut- and Bodekreis. The presented analysis is completed and illustrated with a map.
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10

Pohl, Heinz-Dieter. "164 Kärntner Ortschaften." Gesellschaft für Namenkunde e.V, 2011. https://ul.qucosa.de/id/qucosa%3A12555.

Full text
Abstract:
This contribution presents the 164 villages (including one small town) which are to be equiped with bilingual "place name signs" according to 2011 amendment to the "Ethnic Group Act" (1976) on the basis of article 7 paragraph 3 of the Austrian "State Treaty" (1955), in which is provided, that the topographical terminology and inscriptions in the bilingual Carinthian districts shall be in the Slovene language as well as in German. Every village is presented with his German and Slovenian name including etymology and typological remarks.
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11

Fastnacht, Dorothea. "Der Ortsname Hundshaupten." Gesellschaft für Namenkunde e.V, 2010. https://ul.qucosa.de/id/qucosa%3A12627.

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12

Hengst, Karlheinz. "Der Name Leipzig als Hinweis auf Gegend mit Wasserreichtum." Gesellschaft für Namenkunde e.V, 2009. https://ul.qucosa.de/id/qucosa%3A12534.

Full text
Abstract:
The article continues to discuss the origins and the history of the Saxon place name Leipzig. Several questions are under scrutiny. Starting out from recent research which gives the oldest historical evidence of the place name Leipzig as Lib-, it deals with certain new doubts regarding explanations that try to date the origins of the place name in pre-monolingual times. The question whether one can assume an original Slavonic form to the Slavonic root *lib- is dealt with in detail. The results of this discourse are: Today’s research cannot give a satisfactory explanation that the primary place name is derived from Slavonic. Furthermore, the hypothesis of an existing pre-monolingual form is newly evaluated. In this regard also the formerly existing geographical setting of the area around Leipzig is considered as the deciding motive in naming the place.
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13

Andriessen, Klaus. "Siedlungsnamen in Hessen : Verbreitung und Entfaltung bis 1200 /." Marburg : N. G. Elwert, 1990. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb35501341k.

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14

Loga, Kristin. "Kurzer Überblick über die Siedlungsnamen im Kreis Sangerhausen." Gesellschaft für Namenkunde e.V, 2010. https://ul.qucosa.de/id/qucosa%3A12632.

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Whereas in Sachsen, Brandenburg or Schleswig-Holstein all place names are worked on, the examination of the meaning of many place names in Sachsen-Anhalt is still a desideratum. This article surveys the meaning of the older place names in the former Landkreis Sangerhausen (southern Sachsen-Anhalt) – current and deserted place names – in the territorial boarders of the period 1990 –2007, as well as their level of research based on the author\''s Master\''s degree thesis of the winter semester 2007/08. The author gathered all documentary evidences that could be found in the written sources of regionally specific source books from the first naming in the sources to the 15th / 16th century. The reseach revealed that the oldest names were to be found near the rivers and on most fertile grounds. These place names were mostly derivatives, but one can find also some very old compounds.
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15

Loga, Kristin. "Kurzer Überblick über die Siedlungsnamen im Kreis Sangerhausen." Universitätsbibliothek Leipzig, 2014. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:15-qucosa-146322.

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Abstract:
Whereas in Sachsen, Brandenburg or Schleswig-Holstein all place names are worked on, the examination of the meaning of many place names in Sachsen-Anhalt is still a desideratum. This article surveys the meaning of the older place names in the former Landkreis Sangerhausen (southern Sachsen-Anhalt) – current and deserted place names – in the territorial boarders of the period 1990 –2007, as well as their level of research based on the author\'s Master\'s degree thesis of the winter semester 2007/08. The author gathered all documentary evidences that could be found in the written sources of regionally specific source books from the first naming in the sources to the 15th / 16th century. The reseach revealed that the oldest names were to be found near the rivers and on most fertile grounds. These place names were mostly derivatives, but one can find also some very old compounds.
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16

Hengst, Karlheinz. "Forschungsergebnisse zu Integrationsprozessen von Siedlungsnamen aus der Minderheitensprache Sorbisch im sorbisch-deutschen Sprachkontaktraum." Deutsche Gesellschaft für Namenforschung e.V, 2013. https://ul.qucosa.de/id/qucosa%3A12847.

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The article gives a review about perceptional processes of proper names and its results after decades of exploration in the field of Sorbian-German contacts in everyday speech in the Middle ages. The toponymic material belongs to the region between the rivers Saale and Elbe in the West and the rivers Queis, Bober, Oder in the East of the considered regions. Phenomena recognized of systematical evidence are described in detail, i. e. phonematical, graphematical, morphematical, lexical, and semantical facts are performed. Phases of onymic integration, transsumption and transposition are exemplified. The process of integration is illustrated by variants of onyms as well as by processes of adaptation. Special attention is mentioned to the borrowing events of German place names in Sorbian language since the Middle ages.
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17

Müller, Klaus. "Pflanzenbezeichnungen in Siedlungsnamen des altpolabischen Sprachgebietes Brandenburgs: Ein Beitrag zu einem altpolabischen Lexikon." Gesellschaft für Namenkunde e.V, 2006. https://ul.qucosa.de/id/qucosa%3A31442.

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The article deals with the explanation of toponyms in the territory of Brandenburg, which was populated by Slavs approximately from the 6th to the 14th century. The place-names of Polabian origin in this territory could be derived also from appellatives denoting plants as there are trees (Buckow/beech-tree; Damme/oak- tree; Jabel/apple), bushs and shrubs (Leest/hazel; Kallinchen/elder; Friesack/heath), some kind of grasses (Ziethen/rush; Weisen/reed), berries (Preußnitz/cranberry), flowers (Wust/thistle; Löcknitz/water-lily) and last but not least mushrooms (Feldgrieben/mushroom; Schmarsow/morel). Approximatly 50 toponyms are derived in this way. This article can also give a contribution to the description of the flora of the territory of Brandenburg in earlier times.
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18

Hengst, Karlheinz. "Forschungsergebnisse zu Integrationsprozessen von Siedlungsnamen aus der Minderheitensprache Sorbisch im sorbisch-deutschen Sprachkontaktraum." Universitätsbibliothek Leipzig, 2014. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:15-qucosa-150806.

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The article gives a review about perceptional processes of proper names and its results after decades of exploration in the field of Sorbian-German contacts in everyday speech in the Middle ages. The toponymic material belongs to the region between the rivers Saale and Elbe in the West and the rivers Queis, Bober, Oder in the East of the considered regions. Phenomena recognized of systematical evidence are described in detail, i. e. phonematical, graphematical, morphematical, lexical, and semantical facts are performed. Phases of onymic integration, transsumption and transposition are exemplified. The process of integration is illustrated by variants of onyms as well as by processes of adaptation. Special attention is mentioned to the borrowing events of German place names in Sorbian language since the Middle ages.
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19

Kretschmer, Holger [Verfasser]. "Naturorientierte Bewegungsaktivitäten im urbanen Raum - ein Beitrag zur Planung von siedlungsnahen Erholungsflächen / Holger Kretschmer." Köln : Deutsche Sporthochschule Köln, 2007. http://d-nb.info/1070569771/34.

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