Encyclopedia of Slavic Languages and Linguistics Online

 

The most comprehensive reference work on Slavic languages ever published. It provides authoritative treatment of all important aspects of the Slavic language family from its Indo-European origins to the present day, as well as consideration of the interaction of Slavic with other languages.

 

More

 

News & Announcements

Stay up-to-date with the Brill Community and sign up to our newsletter!

Sign up

Interview with Marc L. Greenberg on the Encyclopedia of Slavic Languages and Linguistics

In June 2020, Brill released the online Encyclopedia of Slavic Languages and Linguistics (ESLL). Read an interview with Editor-in-Chief, Marc L. Greenberg (University of Kansas).

New at Brill: Heritage Language Journal

The Heritage Language Journal (HLJ) was established in 2002 by the National Heritage Language Resource Center at the University of California, Los Angeles. Its aim is to provide a forum for scholars to disseminate research and knowledge about heritage and community languages.

Major Open Access Collaboration between Brill and ERC Project ‘Open Philology: The Composition of Buddhist Scriptures’

Brill is delighted to announce a new Open Access collaboration with ‘Open Philology: The Composition of Buddhist Scriptures’ (OpenPhilology), funded by the European Research Council. The resulting book series Buddhist Open Philology Project will publish translations of scriptures, text editions, and studies on the select corpus of Mahāyāna Buddhist scriptures (sūtra), the Mahāratnakūṭa collection of 49 sūtras. All volumes in the series will be published in Open Access with Brill.

 

Acquisitions Editors

Brill

Seçil Ümitvar

secil.uemitvar@brill.com

Böhlau

V&R unipress

Marie-Carolin Vondracek

marie-carolin.vondracek@v-r.de

Languages and Linguistics

You are looking at 1 - 2 of 2 items for :

  • ‎Literary Diction, Style and Genres x
Clear All

Acrostics constitute an interesting technique usually employed in verse language but also in prose, whereby the first letters (sometimes the initial syllable or even an entire word) in each line or word form a word or phrase, a name or even a message that the composer wishes to hide or reveal skillfully. Acrostics form part of language play but also a mechanism in the artistic usages of the language. Normally, they are employed in gnomes, riddles, and other such didactic compositions, in hymnal poetry, both biblical and post-biblical (particularly frequent in the Middle Ages), but also in secular praise poetry, love songs, inscriptions, or are exploited as rhetorical figures.  In addition to their artistic effect, acrostics may also aim at entertaining through the skillful manipulation of expressive material in ways that amuse the readers or listeners by creating aural or visual images of rare esthetic beauty. In this sense, acrostics may also serve as techniques of cryptography and steganography, having an anagrammatic and symbolic function by encrypting messages, names, and other such things.

Palindromes belong to the playful and/or purposeful manipulations of linguistic means, i.e. individual letters (or sounds), words, phrases and sentence arrangement (in a mirror-image style) in such a way that the reading has a double direction, from left to right and vice versa. Greek palindromes are attested since Late Antiquity but their number rose during the medieval times serving various functions, mainly ‘para-poetic’ as appendices to other compositions, carrying special meanings or alluding to people, states or objects.