Introduction
About
Abbreviations
Abstracting policy
Key Features
Transliterations
Contributors
Editors
Introduction
Marc L. Greenberg’s introduction to the three-volume print edition of the Bibliography of Slavic Linguistics
(published in 2015 by Brill) can be
downloaded here.
About
The
Bibliography of Slavic Linguistics Online (BSLO) currently contains over 105,000 bibliographical
references to linguistic publications on Slavic languages from the years 2000-2023, and is updated
annually (last update: October 2024). A three-volume
print edition
for the years 2000-2014 was published by Brill in 2015. The
Bibliography of Slavic Linguistics is
part of the larger
Linguistic Bibliography Online project.
Abbreviations
See the
list
of English, French, German and Russian abbreviations used in
BSLO.
Abstracting policy
Abstracts and summaries of books and articles are included only in the online version of
BSLO,
and do not appear in the print version. Abstracts are displayed as they appear in the original
publication, although formats may be edited for technical reasons, and copyright remains with the
author and/or publisher.
Key Features
- Contains over 105,000 bibliographical references
- Links to full-text and library services
- DOI links and abstracts increasingly available
- Annual updates with ± 5,000 new references added per year
- Compiled, analyzed, and annotated by an international team of specialists
- Simple, full-text search and advanced search
- Save, print and email bibliographic references
- Export citations in various formats to compile and refine your own bibliography
Subjects included in BSLO :
- Slavic languages
- Theoretical linguistics
- Biographical data on linguists (e.g. biographies, obituaries)
Publication forms included in BSLO :
- Books: monographs and edited volumes incl. Festschriften and conference proceedings
- Articles from journals incl. e-journals and open access
- Chapters from edited volumes
- Short research notes and squibs
- Reviews and review articles
- Bibliographies
- PhD dissertations
- Textbooks and handbooks catered to students
- Online resources
- Obituaries
- Dictionaries on lesser studied languages
- Primary sources and language documentation, especially of lesser studied languages, e.g. corpora, word lists.
Transliterations
Names and titles in Cyrillic script are transliterated according to the following
transliteration table.
As of 2016, names and titles in the original Cyrillic are added to bibliographic descriptions whenever available.
Contributors
The Bibliography of Slavic Linguistics is made possible by the valuable work of our contributing linguists around the world, who gather, compile and annotate bibliographical references within their field of expertise.
- Anne Aarssen (Leiden)
- Milica Anchevski (Skopje)
- Ekaterina Bobyleva (Amsterdam)
- Sofiya Dmitrieva (Sankt-Peterburg)
- Natia Dundua (Tbilisi)
- Nadelina Ivova (Blagoevgrad)
- Agata Kawecka (Łódź)
- Snježana Kordić
- Krystyna Kowalik (Krakow)
- Jurij Mosenkis (Kyjiv)
- Lidija Nepop (Kyjiv)
- Hella Olbertz (Amsterdam)
- Martin Ološtiak (Prešov)
- Evgeniia Osmova (Leiden)
- Jana Papcunová (Praha)
- Lăčezar Perčeklijski (Blagoevgrad)
- Ivan N. Petrov (Łódź)
- Anja Pohontsch (Bautzen/Budyšin)
- Irina Rabovskaia (Sankt-Peterburg)
- Daniela Slančová (Prešov)
- Anna Stefan (Łódź)
- Ágnes Stemler (Budapest)
- Tadeusz Szymański (Kraków)
- Eline van der Veken (Leiden)
- Jasna Vlajić-Popović (Beograd)
The complete list of Linguistic Bibliography contributors and
information about becoming a contributor.
Editors
The Bibliography of Slavic Linguistics is part of the Linguistic Bibliography, edited by
Anne Aarssen and Eline van der Veken. To contact the editors, please
send an email to bl@brill.com.
The three-volume print version of Bibliography of Slavic Linguistics, published in 2015
by Brill, was edited by Sijmen Tol and René Genis, with the assistance of Ekaterina
Bobyleva and Eline van der Veken, and includes the introduction written by Marc L. Greenberg.