Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Grypsera> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 51 of
51
with 100 triples per page.
- Grypsera abstract "Grypsera (Polish pronunciation: [ɡrɨˈpsɛra]; from Low German Gripps meaning "intelligence", "cleverness") is a distinct nonstandard dialect of the Polish language, used traditionally by recidivist prison inmates. It evolved in the 19th century in the areas of the Russian partition. The basic substrate of the dialect is Polish, but with many notable influences (mostly lexical) from other languages used in Polish lands at that time, most notably Yiddish, German, Ukrainian and Russian. It was also heavily influenced by various regional dialects of the Polish language, most notably the Bałak jargon of Lwów and the Warsaw dialect.Initially it served the role of a secret language, but in the late 19th century it became a standard sociolect of criminals. Grypsera is constantly evolving to maintain the status of a language understood only by a select group of inmates and not by the wardens or informers. Because of this it is currently one of the lexically richest dialects of the Polish language. Also, it is not possible to prepare a comprehensive dictionary of the dialect since it differs from prison to prison.Phonetically, Grypsera is similar to the Warsaw dialect and shares its most notable features of assimilation of ⟨i⟩ [i] into ⟨y⟩ [ɨ] and the disappearance of nasal vowels, especially in word-final syllables.".
- Grypsera wikiPageID "1407039".
- Grypsera wikiPageLength "1703".
- Grypsera wikiPageOutDegree "21".
- Grypsera wikiPageRevisionID "682882425".
- Grypsera wikiPageWikiLink Bałak_jargon.
- Grypsera wikiPageWikiLink Category:Cant_languages.
- Grypsera wikiPageWikiLink Category:Polish_dialects.
- Grypsera wikiPageWikiLink Dialects_of_Polish.
- Grypsera wikiPageWikiLink German_language.
- Grypsera wikiPageWikiLink Low_German.
- Grypsera wikiPageWikiLink Lviv.
- Grypsera wikiPageWikiLink Nasal_vowel.
- Grypsera wikiPageWikiLink Nonstandard_dialect.
- Grypsera wikiPageWikiLink Partitions_of_Poland.
- Grypsera wikiPageWikiLink Polish_language.
- Grypsera wikiPageWikiLink Russian_language.
- Grypsera wikiPageWikiLink Secret_language.
- Grypsera wikiPageWikiLink Sociolect.
- Grypsera wikiPageWikiLink Stratum_(linguistics).
- Grypsera wikiPageWikiLink Substratum.
- Grypsera wikiPageWikiLink Syllable.
- Grypsera wikiPageWikiLink Thieves_cant.
- Grypsera wikiPageWikiLink Ukrainian_language.
- Grypsera wikiPageWikiLink Warsaw_dialect.
- Grypsera wikiPageWikiLink Yiddish.
- Grypsera wikiPageWikiLink Yiddish_language.
- Grypsera wikiPageWikiLinkText "Grypsera".
- Grypsera wikiPageWikiLinkText "Thieves' slang".
- Grypsera wikiPageWikiLinkText "grypsera".
- Grypsera hasPhotoCollection Grypsera.
- Grypsera wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Angle_bracket.
- Grypsera wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:IPA-pl.
- Grypsera wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refimprove.
- Grypsera subject Category:Cant_languages.
- Grypsera subject Category:Polish_dialects.
- Grypsera hypernym Dialect.
- Grypsera type Article.
- Grypsera type Language.
- Grypsera type Article.
- Grypsera type Dialect.
- Grypsera comment "Grypsera (Polish pronunciation: [ɡrɨˈpsɛra]; from Low German Gripps meaning "intelligence", "cleverness") is a distinct nonstandard dialect of the Polish language, used traditionally by recidivist prison inmates. It evolved in the 19th century in the areas of the Russian partition. The basic substrate of the dialect is Polish, but with many notable influences (mostly lexical) from other languages used in Polish lands at that time, most notably Yiddish, German, Ukrainian and Russian.".
- Grypsera label "Grypsera".
- Grypsera sameAs Gefängnissprache.
- Grypsera sameAs Grypsera.
- Grypsera sameAs m.04_1s2.
- Grypsera sameAs Уголовный_жаргон.
- Grypsera sameAs Q448168.
- Grypsera sameAs Q448168.
- Grypsera wasDerivedFrom Grypsera?oldid=682882425.
- Grypsera isPrimaryTopicOf Grypsera.