- Jānis
Endzelīns (22
February 1873 – 1 July 1961) was a
Latvian linguist. He
graduated from the
University of Tartu. In 1908, he and Kārlis Mīlenbahs developed...
-
Endzelīns (feminine: Endzelīna) is a
Latvian surname.
Notable people with the
surname include: Jānis
Endzelīns (1873–1961),
Latvian linguist Lūcijs Endzelīns...
-
chess master. He was the son of the
Latvian linguist Jānis
Endzelīns. In 1932,
Endzelins tied for 3rd-5th with
Fricis Apšenieks and
Movsas Feigins, behind...
-
orthography commission under the
leadership of Kārlis Mīlenbahs and Jānis
Endzelīns. It was
introduced by law from 1920 to 1922 in the
Republic of Latvia...
-
Archived from the
original on 13
August 2007.
Retrieved 2
August 2007. "
Endzelīns, Did
Celts Inhabit the
Baltics (1911 Dzimtene's Vēstnesis (Homeland Messenger)...
- of Jānis
Endzelīns,
considered that the
Baltic languages form
their own
distinct branch of the
family of Indo-European languages, and
Endzelīns thought...
- Stockholm. In 1940
Lauberte married Lūcijs
Endzelīns -
chess master and son of the
famous Latvian linguist Jānis
Endzelīns. Full name:
Milda Modrite Lauberte...
- was an Indo-European
language of the
Baltic branch, as
proven by Jānis
Endzelīns. Curonian's
relation to
other Baltic languages is unclear: Some scholars...
-
movements re-emerged. In 1908,
Latvian linguists Kārlis Mīlenbahs and Jānis
Endzelīns elaborated the
modern Latvian alphabet,
which slowly replaced the old...
-
Endzelīns felt that the word ūsiņš has no
Latvian origin, but was
borrowed from the
Germanic word
husing ('home spirit').
After some time,
Endzelīns reflected...