Peter Kirk wrote:
On 13/07/2004 00:37, busmanus wrote:

Anto'nio Martins-Tuva'lkin wrote:

...

ÂSoviet official ÐÑÑÑÑÐ (QruxÑv, pron. Hrueshawf, a.s.a. Krushchov
etc.)



I had a feeling that someone would misunderstand it... Anyway:

     1.) The original form of Khrushchov's name is in a
         different script, and it should consequently appear
         in non-specialized texts in transcription _only_.



In the original Russian, the two dots would appear over the Cyrillic e only in rather specialised circumstances or in texts marked up beginners.

Yes, unfortunately :-(

...
I know rough transcriptions are annoying to the pedantic (so are
they to me), but it's a better compromise to give them in addition
to the original form of the name (only _once_ in the text) than
actually making that original form unidentifiable by stripping diacritics of key importance.


So how does this relate to "bushmanush" vs. "busmanus" (with diacritics stripped?)? What is actually the original form?

It's not diacritics this time. Hungarian uses plain "s" for what is "sh" like in "shirt" in English and "sz" for what would be "s" like in "silk". And "busmanus" is not real Hungarian anyway, as you might guess yourself, it comes from merging the English word "bushman" and the Romany (Gipsy) word "manush" /manËuÊ/ (man in a general sense, human being), to express in a way my fascination with "exotic" languages. So either form is "original".

Regards,

bushmanush


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