- István
Kniezsa (1
December 1898, Trsztena, Austria-Hungary, now Trstená,
Slovakia – 15
March 1965, Budapest, Hungary) was a
Hungarian linguist and Slavist...
- the 2021 census)
Kniezsa's (1938) view on the
ethnic map of the
Kingdom of
Hungary in the 11th century,
based on toponyms.
Kniezsa's view has been criticized...
-
Stories of English. New York:
Overlook Press. p. 197. ISBN 1-58567-601-2.
Kniezsa, V (1997), Jones, C (ed.), The
Edinburgh history of the
Scots language...
- ISBN 978-80-224-0812-7.
Kirschbaum 2005, p. 130. Kristó 1996a, pp. 131–132, 141
Kniezsa 2000, p. 26 "dMGH | Suche". dmgh.de.
Retrieved 2017-01-26. Tibenský, Ján...
- časopis pre výskum a kultúru slovenského jazyka. 1998.
Retrieved 2013-03-12.
Kniezsa, István (1962). Beke, Ödön (ed.). "Pécs város neve" [The name of the city...
- present-day republic.
Kniezsa's (1938) view on the
ethnic map of the
Kingdom of
Hungary in the 11th century,
based on toponyms.
Kniezsa's view has been criticized...
- 26
April 2014.
Retrieved 26
April 2014. Kristó 1996, pp. 131–132, 141.
Kniezsa, István (2000). Magyarország népei a XI. században.
Lucidus Kiadó. p. 26...
-
presumably derived from ****, "beech tree".
Hungarian linguist István
Kniezsa deemed this idea unlikely.
Another interpretation is that the name derives...
- nagyszótár. Budapest:
Arcanum Adatbázis.
Retrieved November 20, 2022.
Kniezsa, István (1955). A
magyar nyelv szláv jövenényszavai, vol. 1. Budapest:...
- and Old Ukrainian.
Samuil Bernstein supported a
similar theory. István
Kniezsa suggested a
mixing of
languages in today's
Central Slovakia after the Mongol...