=?UTF-8?Q?=D0=9D=D0=90=3A_cr=C3=A2=C5=9Fm=C4_=83?=
augerot
bigjim at U.WASHINGTON.EDU
Wed Aug 12 16:41:03 UTC 2009
The Dictionarul limbii romane moderne gives the two, crâşmă and cârciumă, and all their derivatives as equivalent, preferring the latter as the literary form and implying that the former is a dialectal variant. I would suspect, looking at the Slavic cognates, that crâşmă would occur where the Bulgarians and Romanians meet along the Danube and in the Delta area.
jim a.
On Wed, 12 Aug 2009, Kathryn Cassidy wrote:
> Thank you for your replies. I still have a bit of a query relating to the Romanian word crâşmă though. Whilst I understand that cârciumă is related, in some regions, crâşmă is used and not cârciumă. There are then various words derived from this and the village bar owner and his wife for example often be known as crâşmăr and crâşmăriţă. I'm trying to understand if this is just a regional derivation from cârciumă or whether the word has a different root entirely. All the etymological resources I have for Romanian are clear on the root for cârciumă but not crâşmă. Any further suggestions would be appreciated!
>
> Kathryn Cassidy
> ________________________________________
> Від: SEELANGS: Slavic & East European Languages and Literatures list [SEELANGS at bama.ua.edu] від імені augerot [bigjim at U.WASHINGTON.EDU]
> Надіслано: 12 серпня 2009 р. 3:21
> Кому: SEELANGS at bama.ua.edu
> Тема: Re: [SEELANGS] Language Learning in Computer Mediated Communities (LLCMC) Conference - pre-register by September 15
>
> Someone asked about the "tavern" word Rus. корчма, Bulg. кръчма, Rom. cârciumă, and I deleted it. Yes, these are all related but their source is cloudy, some say they are related to the Cz krkati 'drink' , others to the German Krug 'stein'. In all these languages it is a pleasant place to be on a hot summer's day. Cheers!
> --
> james e. augerot, professor___________________________________________
> slavic langs and lits, box 353580, univ. washington, seattle, wa 98195
>
> director, ellison center
> chair, russian, east european and central asian studies 206-685-3113
> adjunct professor, linguistics
> treasurer, society for romanian studies
> secretary, south east european studies association
> web denizen, <http://faculty.washington.edu/bigjim/>
> also: 206-543-5484
>
>
>
>
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