释义 |
Macedo-|ˈmæsɪdɒ| combining form of Macedonian a.1 in the names of dialects spoken in Macedonia, an area in the central Balkans (see Macedonian a.1 and n.1), as Macedo-Bulgarian, Macedo-Illyrian, Macedo-Rumanian, Macedo-Rumanic.
1861Max Müller Lect. Sci. of Lang. v. 182 This Romance language is spoken in Wallachia and Moldavia, and in parts of Hungary, Transylvania, and Bessarabia... It is divided by the Danube into two branches: the Northern or Daco-romanic, and the Southern or Macedo-romanic. 1880A. H. Sayce Introd. Sci. of Lang. II. vii. 120 The Danube divides it [sc. Rumanian] into two branches, the northern or Daco-Rumanic, and the southern or Macedo-Rumanic, the latter of which abounds with Albanian and Greek words. 1908T. G. Tucker Introd. Nat. Hist. Lang. 240 A southern division [of Rumanian]..is formed by the Macedo-Roumanian (or Vlach) of parts of Roumelia, Macedonia, and Thessaly. 1937J. Orr tr. Iordan's Introd. Romance Ling. ii. 95 The current forms in Macedo-Rumanian. Ibid. iii. 267 The five Macedo-Rumanian, the two Megleno-Rumanian, and the two Istro-Rumanian localities. 1948L. Spitzer Linguistics & Lit. Hist. 3 Meyer-Lübke would quote..Macedo-rumanian. 1949Entwistle & Morison Russ. & Slavonic Lang. vii. 370 It is the pronunciation current in Macedo-Bulgarian dialects. Ibid. 374 The forms in -m are widely distributed in Bulgarian dialects, and are universal in Macedo-Bulgarian. 1959G. Nandris Handbk. Old Church Slavonic I. 20 It [sc. epenthetic l] is dropped as a rule in Macedo-Bulgarian. 1960R. Auty Ibid. II. 10 The researches of Vatroslav Oblak showed the affinities of O[ld] C[hurch] S[lavonic] with present-day Macedo-Bulgarian dialects. 1965G. Y. Shevelov Prehist. Slavic 611 There are also two small peripheral areas with a tendency to self-isolation from the other Slavs..: West Baltic and Macedo-B[ul]g[arian]. 1966E. G. Polomé in Birnbaum & Puhvel Anc. Indo-European Dial. 70 Pisani preferred to consider the former as Macedonian,..without, however, connecting siiri- with ‘Macedo-Illyrian’ σίρρας. 1966H. Birnbaum Ibid. 161 We can..assume here the existence of certain C[ommon] Sl[avic] dialect groups... These dialect groups will be shown to correspond to East Slavic.., Lekhitic.., Sorbian.., Czechoslovak.., Sloveno-Serbocroatian.., and Macedo-Bulgarian. 1967D. S. Parlett Short Dict. Lang. 103 Macedo-Rumanian (or Arumanian), in Albania, Thessaly, Macedonia. 1972W. B. Lockwood Panorama Indo-European Lang. 45 Macedo-Rumanian or Aromunian..is the language of the Aromuni, the Rumanians of the south. |