The Azerbaijani alphabet (Azerbaijani: Azərbaycan əlifbası, آذربایجان اَلیفباسؽ, Азəрбајҹан әлифбасы) has three versions which includes the Arabic, Latin, and Cyrillic alphabets.
From the nineteenth century there were efforts by some intellectuals like Mirza Fatali Akhundov and Mammad agha Shahtakhtinski to replace the Arabic script and create a Latin alphabet for Azeri. In 1922, a Latin alphabet was created by Soviet Union sponsored Yeni türk əlifba komitəsi (New Turkic Alphabet Committee; Јени түрк əлифба комитəси) in Baku which hoped that the new alphabet would divide the Azerbaijanis in the USSR from those living in Iran.[4]
An additional reason for the Soviet regime's encouragement of a non-Arabic script was that they hoped the transition would work towards secularizing Azerbaijan's Muslim culture and since language script reform, proposed as early as the 19th century by Azeri intellectuals (e.g. Mirza Fatali Akhundov), had previously been rejected by the Azeri religious establishment on the grounds that Arabic script, the language of the Koran, was "holy and should not be tampered with.[5]
There was some historical basis for the reform which received overwhelming support at the First Turkology Congress in Baku during 1926[6] where the reform was voted for 101 to 7.
The Azeri poet Samad Vurgun declared "Azerbaijani people are proud of being the first among Oriental nations that buried the Arabic alphabet and adopted the Latin alphabet. This event is written in golden letters of our history"[7]
As a result, in the Soviet Union in 1926 the Uniform Turkic Alphabet was introduced to replace the varieties of the Arabic script in use at the time.[8] From 1922 to 1929, both Arabic and Latin scripts were used in Soviet Azerbaijani editions; in 1929, the Latin script was finally chosen. In 1933, the Azerbaijani Latin alphabet was reformed to match alphabets of other Soviet Turkic languages.[9] The reform changed glyphs for some letters and phonetic values for some other letters. In 1939 Joseph Stalin ordered that the Azeri Latin script used in the USSR again be changed, this time to the Cyrillic script[10] in order to sever the Soviet Azerbaijani Turks' ties with the Turkish people in the Republic of Turkey.[4]
When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991 and Azerbaijan gained its independence, one of the first laws passed in the new Parliament was the adoption of a new Latin-script alphabet. The period from 1991 to 2001 was declared the transitional period, when both Latin and Cyrillic alphabet were accepted. Since 2001, the Azerbaijani Latin alphabet is the official alphabet of the Azerbaijani language in the Republic of Azerbaijan.[11][12]
From 1922 until 1933 (old alphabet defined using the Latin script):
From 1958 until 1991 (simplified version of the alphabet defined using the Cyrillic script and the letter Јј borrowed from Latin and abolition of the letters Ээ, Юю, Яя):
The Azerbaijani alphabet is the same as the Turkish alphabet, except for Әə, Xx, and Qq, the letters for sounds which do not exist as separate phonemes in Turkish. When compared to the historic Latin alphabet of 1933, as well as the 1991 version: Ğğ has replaced the historic Ƣƣ; the dotless Iı has replaced the historic I with bowl Ьь (also, the lowercase form of the letter B was changed from small capital ʙ to the usual b, while the uppercase form of the letter y was also changed from a Cyrillic-looking У to the usual Y); the dotted İi has replaced the historic soft-dotted Ii, with the addition of the tittle on its uppercase counterpart, additionally I is now the uppercase counterpart of ı, while i is the lowercase counterpart of İ; Jj has replaced the historic Ƶƶ; Öö has replaced the historic Ɵɵ; Üü has replaced the historic Yy; and Yy has replaced the historic Jј. Әə was replaced by Ää, which was placed between Aa and Bb, but was then changed back to Әə, placed between Ee and Ff in the alphabet. Consequently, Jj, Yy, and some other several letters (Cc, Çç) have also changed their phonetic values in comparison with the historical alphabet.
The sounds [k] and [ɡ] in loanwords were rendered as respectively as q and ƣ in the Latin alphabet of 1933, but as к and г in Cyrillic and are rendered as k and q in the current Latin alphabet: ƣrafiqa (1933 Latin) — графика (Cyrillic) — qrafika (current Latin).
In translingual contexts (e.g. mathematics), the letters of the ISO basic Latin alphabet are named in Azerbaijani in the following way:[13]a, be, ce (se),[14][15] de, e, ef, qe, aş (haş),[15] i, yot, ka, el, em, en, o, pe, ku, er, es, te, u, ve, dubl-ve, iks, iqrek, zet.
Schwa (Ə)
When the new Latin script was introduced on December 25, 1991, A-diaeresis (Ä ä) was selected to represent the sound /æ/. However, on May 16, 1992, it was replaced by the grapheme schwa (Ə ə), used previously. Although use of Ä ä (also used in Tatar, Turkmen, and Gagauz) seems to be a simpler alternative as the schwa is absent in most character sets, particularly Turkish encoding, it was reintroduced; the schwa had existed continuously from 1929 to 1991 to represent Azeri's most common vowel, in both post-Arabic alphabets (Latin and Cyrillic) of Azerbaijan.
However, the "upside-down 'e'" on computers caused considerable problems during the early 1990s[16] as its placement on standard Azerbaijani keyboards and its assignment in computer encodings[17] had not yet become standardized.
Azerbaijani Arabic alphabet
The development of a modern standardized Azerbaijani Arabic alphabet has been an ongoing project in Iran in the past several decades. Persian alphabet, without modification or standardization is not suitable for Azerbaijani as:
It contains multiple letters for the same consonant sounds, for example there are two letters for the sound [t] (ت، ط)
Persian alphabet does not have letters and diacritics for many of the vowels used in Azerbaijani and other Turkic languages.
The first steps in the process of standardization started with the publication of Azerbaijani magazines and newspapers such as Varlıq from 1979. Azerbaijani-speaking scholars and literarians showed great interest in involvement in such ventures and in working towards the development of a standard writing system. These effort culminated in language seminars being held in Tehran, chaired by the founder of Varlıq, Javad Heyat in 2001 where a document outlining the standard orthography and writing conventions were published for the public.[1] This standard of writing is today canonized by the official Persian–Azeri Turkish dictionary in Iran titled "lugat name-ye Turki-ye Azarbayjani".[18]
The use of Azerbaijani Arabic alphabet, is widespread. However, due to a failure by the Iranian government to implement the constitutionally-required formal education of Azerbaijani language in the Iranian education system, and due to the spread of use of computers and smartphones, and the ease of using Latin alphabet on these platforms, the Latin alternative from Iran's northern neighbor has been gaining popularity in the last two decades.
Vowels
In Azerbaijani Arabic alphabet, nine vowels are defined. Six of those vowels are present in Persian, whereas three are missing. Diacritics (including hamza) in combination with the letters alef (ا), vav (و) or ye (ی) are used in order to mark each of these vowels.
Important to note that similar to Persian alphabet, vowels in the initial position require an alef (ا) all the time—and if needed, followed by either vav (و) or ye (ی). This excludes Arabic loanwords that may start with ʿayn (ع).
Below are the six vowel sounds in common with Persian, their representation in Latin and Arabic alphabets.
Ə-ə (اَ / ـَ / ـه / ه); /æ/; A front vowel; only marked with fatha (ـَ) diacritic, or with a he at middle or final positions in a word. Examples include: əlاَل'hand', ətاَت'meat', əzməkاَزمَک'to crush'
E-e (ائ / ئ); /ɛ/; A front vowel; marked with a hamza on top a ye (ئ). Examples include: elائل'people', enائن'wide'
O-o (اوْ / وْ); /o/; A rounded back vowel; Shown with vav (و), either unmarked, or marked with sukun (zero-vowel) (ـْ). Examples include: odاوْد'fire', otاوْت'grass', onاوْن'ten'.
A-a (آ / ـا); /ɑ/; A back vowel; shown with alef (ا) in middle and final positions, and alef-maddeh (آ) in initial position. Examples include: adآد'name', atآت'horse'
İ-i (ای / ی) /i/; A front vowel; shown with a ye (ی) and no diacritic. Examples include: ilایل'year', ipایپ'rope'
U-u (اۇ / ۇ) /u/; A back vowel; shown with a vav and a Ḍammah (ـُ). Examples include: uzunاۇزۇن'long', ucuzاۇجۇز'cheap'
Below are the three vowels that don't exist in Persian, and are marked with diacritics.
Ö-ö (اؤ / ؤ) /œ/; A front vowel; shown with a hamza on top a vav (ؤ). Examples include: öyüdاؤیوٚد'advice', gözگؤز'eye'
Ü-ü (اوٚ / وٚ) /y/; A front vowel; shown with a "v" diacritic on top a vav (وٚ). Examples include üstاوٚست'up', üzümاوٚزوٚم'grapes', güzgüگوٚزگوٚ'mirror'
I-ı (ایٛ / یٛ) /ɯ/ (rarely used and usually substituted by ى); A back vowel; shown with an inverted "v" diacritic on top of a ye (یٛ). Examples include: qızılقیٛزیٛل'gold', açıqآچیٛق'open, turned on', sırğaسیٛرغا'earring', sarıساریٛ'yellow'
Like other Turkic languages, Azerbaijani has a system of vowel harmony. Azerbaijani's system of vowel harmony is primarily a front/back system. This means that all vowels in a word must be ones that are pronounced either at the front or at the back of the mouth.[19] In Azerbaijani there are two suffixes that make a plural. It is either -ـلَر-lər or -ـلار-lar, front and back vowels respectively. The same variety of options for suffixes exists across the board in Azerbaijani. Here is how vowel harmony works, in an example of a word in which the vowels are all frontal:
The word for 'dog' is ایتit. The word for 'dogs' is ایتلَرitlər. (ایتلارitlar is incorrect.)
And below are examples for back vowels:
The word for 'mountain' is داغdağ, thus the word for 'mountains' is داغلارdağlar.
A secondary vowel harmony system exists in Azerbaijani language, which is a rounded/unrounded system. This applies to some (but not all) of the suffixes. For example, there are four variations for the common suffix لی--lı/-li and -لو-lu/-lü.
The word for 'salt' is دوُزduz. The word for 'salty' will be دوُزلوduzlu.
In Azerbaijani, the city of Tabriz is تبریزTəbriz. The word for someone from Tabriz is تبریزلیTəbrizli.
Conventions on writing of vowels
In the Perso-Arabic script, or in Arabic scripts in general, diacritics are usually not written out, except in texts for beginners or in order to avoid confusion with a similarly written word.
In the Azerbaijani Arabic alphabet, there are conventions with regards to writing of diacritics.[1]
For A-a (آ / ـا), the vowel is always written and shown with alef.
For Ə-ə (اَ / ـَ / ـه / ه), the initial vowel is written with an alef. Vowels in the middle of the word are written in two ways. They are either shown, i.e. written with a diacritic, which usually needs not be written; or they are written with a final he (ـه / ه). The former is used in closed syllables (CVC), or in the first open syllable of the word. The latter is used in open syllables (CV) with the exception of the first syllable of the word. Note that the vowel he (ـه / ه) is not attached to the following letter, but is separated from it with a Zero-width non-joiner. For example, the word gələcəyim (gə-lə-cəy-im) 'my future' is written as گلهجگیم. Note that the first syllable of the word is open, but it is not marked. The second syllable is open, and thus the vowel is marked with he (ـه / ه), not attached to the following letter. Also note the breakdown of the word into syllables – this is because the word is made up of gələcək plus possessive pronoun -im.
For E-e (ائ / ئ), the sound is shown with a hamzeh on top of a ye in almost all cases. The exceptions are loanwords of Persian, Arabic, or European origin. For example, enerji'energy' is written as انرژی. Writing it as ائنئرژی is incorrect. Other examples include تلویزیونteleviziyon'TV'), علمelm'science', and قانعqane'satisfied'. In words, for both Azerbaijani and loanwords, if ⟨E⟩ and ⟨Y⟩ come side by side, both letters are written; e.g., قئیدqeyd, شئیداşeyda, ویئتنامVyetnam, غئیرتğeyrət. Loanwords from Persian or Arabic which contain the sound [i], but are adopted in Azerbaijani with an [e] sound, are shown with ⟨ئ⟩. Examples include تسبئحtəsbeh, بئساوادbesavad, پئشکشpeşkəş.
For İ-i (ای / ی), the sound is always shown with ye (ی).
For I-ı (ایٛ / یٛ), the sound is shown with ye (ی) all the time. The writing of the diacritic is optional and not necessary, and is only ever actually done in beginner language lesson books or in order to avoid confusion with a similarly written word. Native speakers can usually read words without the use of diacritic, as they are aware of vowel harmony rules (meaning that they can interpolate the correct pronunciation of ⟨ی⟩ by the presence of other vowels in the word). In words like qızılقیزیل'gold', familiarity with the vocabulary helps native speakers.[citation needed]
For round vowels, O-o (اوْ / وْ), U-u (اوُ / وُ), Ö-ö (اؤ / ؤ), and Ü-ü (اوٚ / وٚ), it is recommended that the first syllable containing such vowel be marked with diacritic, while the rest can remain unmarked and solely written with a vav (و). This reduces the effort of marking vowels, while also providing readers with a clue with respect to vowel harmony, namely as to whether the vowels of the word are to be front or back. Examples include گؤرونوشgörünüş, اوْغوزoğuz, دوٚیونdüyün.
However, it is recommended[by whom?] new learners write diacritics on all round vowels, e.g., گؤروٚنوٚشgörünüş, اوْغوُزoğuz, دوٚیوٚنdüyün.
In daily practice, it is rare to see vowels other than Ö-ö (اؤ / ؤ) marked. This may be due to the fact that hamza is the only one of such symbols that is frequently written in Persian as well, and due to the fact that the inverted "v" diacritic for Ü-ü (اوٚ / وٚ) does not exist on typical Persian keyboards.
Consonants
While Azerbaijani Latin alphabet has nine vowels and twenty-three consonants, Azerbaijani Arabic alphabet has thirty consonants, as there are sounds that are represented by more than one consonant. Highlighted columns indicate letters from Persian or Arabic that are exclusively used in loanwords, and not in native Azerbaijani words.[1]
Arabic loanwords that in their original spelling end in ʿayn (ع), such as "طمع" (təmə') (meaning greed), or "متاع" (məta') (meaning baggage), are instead pronounced in Azerbaijani with a final [h]. Thus they are to be written with a "ح" (he). e.g. "طاماح" (tamah), "ماتاح" (matah). (Note that the vowels of these words are also changed in accordance with the vowel harmony system) If the change in pronunciation of ʿayn (ع) happens mid-word, it would be written as "ه / هـ". An example being "فعله" (fə'lə) (meaning worker) being written as "فهله" (fəhlə).
Loanwords that start with consonant sequences "SK, ST, SP, ŞT, ŞP", in Azerbaijani Arabic script, they are to be written starting with an "ای" (i). e.g. ایستئیک (isteyk) (meaning steak), ایسپورت (isport) (meaning sports)
There is a distinction between the pronunciation of "غ" and "ق" in Azerbaijani. Such distinction does not exist in standard Iranian Persian. But in any case, loanwords from Arabic or Persian, regardless of how their "غ" and "ق" is pronounced, are to be kept as their original writing. This is not a rule in Latin alphabet. An example being the word meaning Afghan, "افغان" (Əfqan). The "غ" in Azerbaijani is pronounced as a [g], meaning that, as it is done in Latin, it is being pronounced as if it is a "ق". But the writing of the loanword in Azerbaijani Arabic will remain the same.
Loanwords whose original spelling was with a "گ" (G g) but are written in Latin alphabet with a Q q, are to be written with a "ق". Examples include "قاز" (Qaz) (meaning gas, written as "گاز" in Persian), "اوْرتوقرافی" (Orfoqrafi) (meaning orthography, written as "اورتوگرافی" in Persian)
When suffixes are added to words ending in "ک" (K k), resulting in the letter "ک" (K k) being between two vowels, will have its pronunciation modified to [j], equivalent to the letter "ی" (Y y). This change is reflected in Latin writing. However, in the Arabic script, in order to maintain the original familiar shape of the word, the letter "گ" (G g) (functioning in a role dubbed "soft G") is used, as the letter is similar in shape to "ک". Examples: "çörək+im" becoming "çörəyim" in Latin script (meaning my bread), but "چؤرک+یم" becoming "چؤرگیم". "gələcək+im" becoming "gələcəyim" in Latin script (meaning my future), but "گلهجک+یم" becoming "گلهجگیم".
Whenever the letter "ی" (Y) is placed between two "ای" (İ-i) vowels, it is written as "گ" (G g) (functioning in a role dubbed "soft G"). This is not something done in Latin script. Example: "ایگیرمی" (iyirmi) (meaning twenty)
The letters "و" ,"ه / هـ", and "ی" have a double function, as consonant, and as part of vowels. When used as consonant, they are written with no diacritic or marking.
Shadda, the Arabic diacritic for gemination, is retained for loanwords from Arabic. Examples: "مۆکمّل" (mükəmməl) (meaning complementary), "مدنیّت" (mədəniyyət) (meaning civility). In native Azerbaijani words and in loanwords of European origin, double consonants are written twice. Examples: "یئددی" (yeddi) (meaning seven), "ساققال" (saqqal) (meaning beard), "اوْتللو" (Otello).
^It is rare to find native Azerbaijani words with "ژ / j"
Comparison of Azerbaijani alphabets
National anthem
This section contains the national anthem of Azerbaijan, in the current Latin, Cyrillic, Jaŋalif, Georgian, and Arabic alphabets.
Azerbaijani in Latin script 1992–Present
Azerbaijani in Arabic script (Modern convention)
English
Azərbaycan! Azərbaycan!
Ey qəhrəman övladın şanlı Vətəni!
Səndən ötrü can verməyə cümlə hazırız!
Səndən ötrü qan tökməyə cümlə qadiriz!
Üçrəngli bayrağınla məsud yaşa!
Üçrəngli bayrağınla məsud yaşa!
Minlərlə can qurban oldu,
Sinən hərbə meydan oldu!
Hüququndan keçən əsgər,
Hərə bir qəhrəman oldu!
Sən olasan gülüstan,
Sənə hər an can qurban!
Sənə min bir məhəbbət
Sinəmdə tutmuş məkan!
آذربایجان! آذربایجان!
ای قهرمان اؤولادؽن شانلؽ وطنی!
سندن اؤترۆ جان وئرمهیه جۆمله حاضؽرؽز!
سندن اؤترۆ قان تؤکمهیه جۆمله قادیریز!
اۆچ رنگلی بایراغؽنلا مسعود یاشا!
اۆچ رنگلی بایراغؽنلا مسعود یاشا!
مینلرله جان قۇربان اوْلدۇ،
سینهن حربه مئیدان اوْلدۇ!
حۆقۇقۇندان کئچن عسگر،
هره بیر قهرمان اوْلدۇ!
سن اوْلاسان گۆلۆستان،
سنه هر آن جان قۇربان!
سنه مین بیر محبّت
سینهمده تۇتمۇش مکان!
نامۇسۇنۇ حیفظ ائتمهیه،
بایراغؽنؽ یۆکسلتمهیه
نامۇسۇنۇ حیفظ ائتمهیه،
جۆمله گنجلر مۆشتاقدؽر!
شانلؽ وطن! شانلؽ وطن!
آذربایجان! آذربایجان!
Azerbaijan! Azerbaijan!
Oh you glorious fatherland of the brave child!
We are all together ready to give our lives for you!
We are all together strong to sacrifice our blood for you!
Live blessed with your three-coloured flag!
Live blessed with your three-coloured flag!
Thousands of lives were sacrificed,
Your chest was an arena for battles!
Soldiers gave their life for you!
All of them became heroes!
You shall be a garden full of roses,
Every moment our life can be sacrificed for you!
For you one-thousand-one carresses
are constant in my chest!
Guard your honor,
To held up high your flag,
Guard your honor,
The whole youth is enthused!
Honorable fatherland! Honorable fatherland!
Azerbaijan! Azerbaijan!
Azerbaijan! Azerbaijan!
Azerbaijani in Latin script 1991-1992
Azerbaijani in Cyrillic script 1958-1991 (Still used in Dagestan)
Azerbaijani in Cyrillic script 1939-1958
Azärbaycan! Azärbaycan!
Ey qähräman övladın şanlı Vätäni!
Sändän ötrü can vermäyä cümlä hazırız!
Sändän ötrü qan tökmäyä cümlä qadiriz!
Üçrängli bayrağınla mäsud yaşa!
Üçrängli bayrağınla mäsud yaşa!
Minlärlä can qurban oldu,
Sinän härbä meydan oldu!
Hüququndan keçän äsgär,
Härä bir qähräman oldu!
Sän olasan gülüstan,
Sänä här an can qurban!
Sänä min bir mähäbbät
Sinämdä tutmuş mäkan!
آذربایجان! آذربایجان!
ای قهرمان اولادین شانلی وطنی
سندن اوترو جان ورمهیه جومله حاضریز
سندن اوتروقان توکمهیه جومله قادیریز
اوچ رنگلی بایراقینلا مسعود یاشا!
اوچ رنگلی بایراقینلا مسعود یاشا!
مینلرله جان قوربان اولدو
سینن حربه میدان اولدو!
حقوقوندان کچن عسکر
هره بیر قهرمان اولدو!
سن اولاسان گولوستان!
سنه هرآن جان قوربان!
سنه مین بیر محبت
سینهمده توتموش مکان!
ناموسونو حیفظ اتمهیه
بایراقینی یوکسلتمهیه
ناموسونو حیفظ اتمهیه
جومله گنجلر موشتاقدیر
شانلی وطن! شانلی وطن!
آذربایجان! آذربایجان!
آذربایجان! آذربایجان!
Transliteration
The Arabic, Latin, and Cyrillic alphabets each have a different sequence of letters. The table below is ordered according to the latest Latin alphabet:
The Azeri Arabic alphabet originally contained the letter ڴ. Originally ڴ stood for the sound [ŋ], which then merged with [n]. Initial versions of the Azeri Latin alphabet contained the letter Ꞑꞑ, which was dropped in 1938. This letter no longer exists in the Azerbaijani Arabic orthographic conventions anymore either.[1]
The letter Цц, intended for the sound [ts] in loanwords, was used in Azerbaijani Cyrillic until 1951. In Azerbaijani, like in most Turkic languages, the sound [ts] generally becomes [s].
The apostrophe was used until 2004 in loanwords from Arabic for representing the glottal stop or vowel length. Since 2004, the apostrophe is not used in Azerbaijani except in foreign proper names.
^ abHatcher, Lynley (July 2008). "Script change in Azerbaijan: acts of identity". International Journal of the Sociology of Language (192): 106. doi:10.1515/IJSL.2008.038.
^Wright, Sue (2004). Language Policy and Language Planning. Basingstokes: Palgrave MacMillan.
^Clement, Victoria (2005). The politics of script reform in Soviet Turkmenistan: alphabet and national identity formation (PhD thesis). Ohio State University., cited in Hatcher 2008
^Г. Г. Исмаилова (G. G. Ismailova). К истории азербайджанского алфавита // Вопросы совершенствования алфавитов тюркских языков СССР / Н. А. Баскаков. — Moscow: Наука (Nauka) Publishers, 1972. — P. 28—40 (in Russian).
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Erika Lynn Van PeltLahir12 Desember 1985 (umur 38)Providence, Rhode Island, Amerika SerikatAsalSouth Kingstown, Rhode IslandGenreRockPekerjaanPenyanyi, penyanyi pernikahan,[1] disc jockey[2]InstrumenVokal, pianoTahun aktif2005–sekarangSitus webSitus web resmi Erika Lynn Van Pelt[3] (lahir 12 Desember 1985) adalah penyanyi Amerika Serikat yang berasal dari South Kingstown, Rhode Island,[4] yang merupakan salah satu finalis American Idol musim kesebelas....
Различные радиолампы производства СССР Электро́нная ла́мпа, радиола́мпа — электровакуумный прибор (точнее, вакуумный электронный прибор), работающий за счёт управления интенсивностью потока электронов, движущихся в вакууме или разрежённом газе между электродами ...
JamestownJamestownCountryUnited KingdomAdministrative AreaSaint HelenaLuas • Total1,4 sq mi (3,6 km2)Populasi (2008) • Total714 • Kepadatan5,140/sq mi (198,3/km2) Jamestown adalah ibu kota dari pulau Saint Helena, wilayah persemakmuran Inggris di Samudera Atlantik. Kota ini memiliki populasi 714 jiwa (tahun 2008).[1] Jamestown tampak dari atas. Geografi Iklim Jamestown memiliki iklim tandus dengan suhu yang konsisten sepanja...
US book publisher from 1837Not to be confused with Little, Brown Book Group.For the former chief of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, see Lytle Brown. Little, Brown and CompanyParent companyHachette Book Group USAFounded1837; 187 years ago (1837)FounderCharles Coffin LittleJames BrownCountry of originUnited StatesHeadquarters locationBoston (1837 to 2011) and New York City (2001 to present), U.S.ImprintsBack Bay Books; Mulholland Books; Jimmy Patterson Books; Little, Brown S...
Philosophical work by Leibniz Monadology The Monadology (French: La Monadologie, 1714) is one of Gottfried Leibniz's best known works of his later philosophy. It is a short text which presents, in some 90 paragraphs, a metaphysics of simple substances, or monads. Text The first manuscript page of the Monadology During his last stay in Vienna from 1712 to September 1714, Leibniz wrote two short texts in French which were meant as concise expositions of his philosophy. After his death, Principe...
هذه المقالة لا تحتوي إلّا على استشهادات عامة فقط. فضلًا، ساهم بتحسينها بعزو الاستشهادات إلى المصادر في متن المقالة. (سبتمبر 2018)Learn how and when to remove this message قلعة قايتبايقلعة قايتباى (بالعربية) معلومات عامةنوع المبنى قلعةالمكان الإسكندريةالمنطقة الإدارية محافظة الإسكندرية البل�...
У Вікіпедії є статті про інших людей із прізвищем Вишеславський. Леонід Миколайович Вишеславський Портрет Леоніда Вишеславського, зроблений його донькою Іриною, 1984 рікНародився 5 (18) березня 1914Миколаїв, Російська імперіяПомер 27 грудня 2002(2002-12-27)[1] (88 років)Київ, Украї�...
Head of the House of Habsburg-Tuscany Archduke Gottfried of AustriaHead of the House of Habsburg-TuscanyReign8 November 1948 - 21 January 1984PredecessorArchduke Peter FerdinandSuccessorArchduke Leopold FranzBorn(1902-03-14)14 March 1902Linz, Upper Austria, Austria-HungaryDied21 January 1984(1984-01-21) (aged 81)Bad Ischl, Upper Austria, AustriaSpousePrincess Dorothea of BavariaIssueArchduchess ElisabethArchduchess AliceArchduke Leopold FranzArchduchess Maria AntoinetteNamesGerman: Gottf...
Logo Konferensi HAM Islam di Kairo Deklarasi Kairo tentang Hak Asasi Manusia dalam Islam adalah deklarasi hak asasi manusia yang diadakan di Kairo, Ibu kota Mesir pada 1990 oleh Organisasi Konferensi Islam (OKI) dan diakui oleh Perserikatan Bangsa-Bangsa (PBB). Deklarasi ini merumuskan poin-poin hak asasi manusia dalam perspektif nilai-nilai ajaran Islam. Dalam deklarasi ini, terdapat sekitar 25 pasal yang sebagian besar mengutip dari Al-Qur’an, sebagai dasar acuan dan sumber ajaran nilai-n...
Artikel ini sebagian besar atau seluruhnya berasal dari satu sumber. Tolong bantu untuk memperbaiki artikel ini dengan menambahkan rujukan ke sumber lain yang tepercaya. 21 Emon21エモン(Nijūichi Emon) MangaPengarangFujiko F. FujioPenerbitShogakukanImprintTentōmushi ComicsMajalahWeekly Shōnen SundayDemografiShōnenTerbit1968 – 1969Volume4 Film anime21 Emon: Uchū e Irasshai!SutradaraTsutomu ShibayamaStudioShin-Ei AnimationTayangAgustus 1, 1981Durasi92 menit AnimeSutradaraMitsuru HongoS...
1973 studio album by Don SebeskyGiant BoxStudio album by Don SebeskyReleased1973RecordedApril and May 1973StudioVan Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, NJGenreJazzLength59:31LabelCTICTI 6031/32ProducerCreed TaylorDon Sebesky chronology Distant Galaxy(1972) Giant Box(1973) The Rape of El Morro(1975) Giant Box is a double album by American arranger/conductor and composer Don Sebesky recorded in 1973 and released on the CTI label.[1] Reception The Allmusic review states This may ha...
German painter This article is about the painter. For the American author, see Karl Hess. For the scientist, see Karl Hess (scientist). Portrait of a priest (Karl Hess, 1820s) Karl Hess (1801 in Düsseldorf – 16 November 1874 in Bad Reichenhall) was a German painter. Biography Hess was the third son of Carl Ernst Christoph Hess, an engraver. The elder Hess had already acquired a name when in 1806 the elector of Bavaria, having been raised to a kingship by Napoleon, transferred the Düsseldo...
Town in Northeastern, North Macedonia For other uses, see Kratovo (disambiguation). Place in Northeastern, North MacedoniaKratovo Кратово (Macedonian)Kratovo FlagSealKratovoLocation within North MacedoniaCoordinates: 42°04′N 22°11′E / 42.067°N 22.183°E / 42.067; 22.183Country North MacedoniaRegion NortheasternMunicipality KratovoGovernment • MayorTodorche Nikolovski (VMRO-DPMNE)[1]Elevation600 m (2,000 ft)Populatio...
Garden used for scientific study, conservation and public display This article is about a particular type of garden. For other uses, see Botanical garden (disambiguation). Orto botanico di Pisa operated by the University of Pisa: the first university botanic garden in Europe, established in 1544 under botanist Luca Ghini, it was relocated in 1563 and again in 1591. A botanical garden or botanic garden[nb 1] is a garden with a documented collection of living plants for the purpose of s...
German scientist Schub. redirects here. For the classical pianist, see Andre-Michel Schub. Gotthilf Heinrich von Schubert Gotthilf Heinrich von Schubert (26 April 1780, in Hohenstein-Ernstthal – 30 June 1860, in Laufzorn, a village in Oberhaching) was a German physician, naturalist and psychologist. Biography He began his studies with theology, but turned to medicine and established himself as a doctor in Altenburg, Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg. He soon gave up his practice however and devoted hims...