Languages, BAN-CAN
Language, a system of conventional spoken, manual, or written symbols by means of which human beings, as members of a social group and participants in its culture, express themselves. The functions of language include communication, the expression of identity, play, imaginative expression, and emotional release.
Languages Encyclopedia Articles By Title
Bantu languages, a group of some 500 languages belonging to the Bantoid subgroup of the Benue-Congo branch of the......
Bar Hebraeus was a medieval Syrian scholar noted for his encyclopaedic learning in science and philosophy and for......
Antanas Baranauskas was a Roman Catholic bishop and poet who wrote one of the greatest works in Lithuanian literature,......
William Barnes was an English dialect poet whose work gives a vivid picture of the life and labour of rural southwestern......
Isaac Barrow was an English classical scholar, theologian, and mathematician who was the teacher of Isaac Newton.......
Roland Barthes was a French essayist and social and literary critic whose writings on semiotics, the formal study......
Jules Barthélemy-Saint-Hilaire was a French politician, journalist, and scholar. Barthélemy-Saint-Hilaire worked......
John Russell Bartlett was a bibliographer who made his greatest contribution to linguistics with his pioneer work,......
Matteo Giulio Bartoli was a linguist who emphasized the geographic spread of linguistic changes and their interpretation......
Basic English, simplified form of English developed between 1926 and 1930 by the British writer and linguist Charles......
Basque language, language isolate, the only remnant of the languages spoken in southwestern Europe before the region......
Charles Baudelaire was a French poet, translator, and literary and art critic whose reputation rests primarily......
Wolf Heinrich, count von Baudissin was a German diplomat and man of letters who with Dorothea Tieck was responsible......
Jan Niecisław Baudouin de Courtenay was a linguist who regarded language sounds as structural entities, rather......
Jean-Antoine de Baïf was the most learned of the seven French poets who constituted the group known as La Pléiade.......
Friedrich Bechtel was a classical scholar who contributed substantially to Greek dialectology and Homeric criticism.......
Otto Behaghel was a language scholar who specialized in studies of the German language. His work, Deutsche Syntax,......
Belarusian language, East Slavic language that is historically the native language of most Belarusians. Many 20th-century......
Rémy Belleau was a Renaissance scholar and poet who wrote highly polished portraits known as miniatures. He was......
John Bellenden was a Scottish writer whose translation of Hector Boece’s Scotorum historiae had a profound influence......
Andrés Bello was a poet and scholar, regarded as the intellectual father of South America. His early reading in......
Pietro Bembo was a Renaissance cardinal who wrote one of the earliest Italian grammars and assisted in establishing......
Einar Benediktsson was a Neoromantic poet called by some the greatest Icelandic poet of the 20th century. Benediktsson’s......
Theodor Benfey was a German scholar of Sanskrit and comparative linguistics whose works, particularly his edition......
Bengali language, member of the Indo-Aryan group of the Indo-Iranian branch of the Indo-European language family.......
Girolamo Benivieni was a poet who was an intimate of several great men of Renaissance Florence. He is important......
Charles H. Bennett is an American physicist noted for his work in quantum cryptography and quantum teleportation.......
Eric Bentley was a British-born American critic, translator, and stage director responsible for introducing the......
Benue-Congo languages, the largest branch of the Niger-Congo language family, in terms of the number of speakers,......
Berber languages, family of languages in the Afro-Asiatic language phylum. As they are the most homogeneous division......
Nina Berberova was a Russian-born émigré writer, biographer, editor, and translator known for her examination of......
Bernard de Chartres was a humanist and philosopher, head of the celebrated school of Chartres, in France. His attempt......
John Bourchier, 2nd Baron Berners was an English writer and statesman, best known for his simple, fresh, and energetic......
Francesco Berni was a poet and translator important for his Tuscan version of Matteo Boiardo’s epic poem Orlando......
Berta languages, group of languages that form a part of the Nilo-Saharan language family. Some 125,000 Berta speakers......
Attilio Bertolucci was an Italian poet, literary critic, and translator. His verse is noted for its lyric accessibility,......
Bhatti was a Sanskrit poet and grammarian, author of the influential Bhattikavya, which is a mahakavya (“great......
Haim Naḥman Bialik was a leading Hebrew poet, esteemed for expressing in his verse the yearnings of the Jewish......
Bian Zhilin was a Chinese poet and translator especially noted for his highly evocative poetry. Bian left home......
biblical translation, the art and practice of rendering the Bible into languages other than those in which it was......
Bihārī languages, eastern Indo-Aryan languages spoken in the state of Bihār, India, and in the Tarai region of......
bilingualism, Ability to speak two languages. It may be acquired early by children in regions where most adults......
Laurence Binyon was an English poet, dramatist, and art historian, a pioneer in the European study of Far Eastern......
Elizabeth Bishop was an American poet known for her polished, witty, descriptive verse. Her short stories and her......
Max Black was an American Analytical philosopher who was concerned with the nature of clarity and meaning in language.......
Wilhelm Bleek was a comparative linguist known for his pioneer studies of South African languages as the “Father......
Allan Bloom was an American philosopher and writer best remembered for his provocative best-seller The Closing......
Leonard Bloomfield was an American linguist whose book Language (1933) was one of the most important general treatments......
Robert Bly was an American poet, translator, editor, and author, perhaps best known to the public at large as the......
Friedrich Martin von Bodenstedt was a German writer, translator, and critic whose poetry had great popularity during......
Bodo language, a language of the Tibeto-Burman branch of Sino-Tibetan languages having several dialects. Bodo is......
Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius was a Roman scholar, Christian philosopher, and statesman, author of the celebrated......
Louise Bogan was an American poet and literary critic who served as poetry critic for The New Yorker from 1931......
Wojciech Bogusławski was the leading playwright of the Polish Enlightenment, a period of cultural revival much......
Bokmål, a literary form of Norwegian developed by the gradual reform of written Danish in conformity to Norwegian......
Bombe, electromechanical code-breaking machine created by cryptologists in Britain during World War II to decode......
Juan Pablo Bonet was a Spanish cleric and educator who pioneered in the education of the deaf. Bonet helped develop......
Yves Bonnefoy was perhaps the most important French poet of the latter half of the 20th century. Bonnefoy was also......
Mary Louise Booth was an American journalist, prolific translator from the French, and the first editor of Harper’s......
Franz Bopp was a German linguist who established the importance of Sanskrit in the comparative study of Indo-European......
Jacques Borel was a French writer, translator, and critic. The son of a civil servant, Borel was educated at the......
Boris I ; feast day May 2 [May 15]) was the khan of Bulgaria (852–889), whose long reign witnessed the conversion......
Juan Boscán Almogáver was a Catalan poet who wrote exclusively in Castilian and adapted the Italian hendecasyllable......
Bosnian-Croatian-Montenegrin-Serbian language (BCMS), term of convenience used to refer to the forms of speech......
Paul Bowles was an American-born composer, translator, and author of novels and short stories in which violent......
Nicholas Brady was an Anglican clergyman and poet, author, with Nahum Tate, of a well-known metrical version of......
Brahmi, writing system ancestral to all Indian scripts except Kharoshthi. Commonly believed by scholars to be of......
Brahui language, isolated member of the Dravidian languages that is spoken in south-central and western Pakistan.......
Braille, universally accepted system of writing used by and for blind persons and consisting of a code of 63 characters,......
Braj Bhasha language, language descended from Shauraseni Prakrit and commonly viewed as a western dialect of Hindi.......
Gilles Brassard is a Canadian computer scientist known for his work in quantum cryptography and quantum teleportation.......
James Henry Breasted was an American Egyptologist, archaeologist, and historian who promoted research on ancient......
Breton language, one of the six extant Celtic languages (the others being Cornish, Welsh, Irish, Scottish Gaelic,......
William Broome was a British scholar and poet, best known as a collaborator with Alexander Pope and Elijah Fenton......
Hans Adolf Brorson was a Danish Pietist clergyman, the outstanding writer of hymns of his day, and translator of......
Karl Brugmann was a German linguist who gained a position of preeminence in comparative Indo-European linguistics......
Leonardo Bruni was an Italian humanist scholar of the Renaissance. Bruni was secretary to the papal chancery from......
Brythonic languages, one of two groups of the modern Celtic languages, the other being Goidelic. The Brythonic......
Valery Yakovlevich Bryusov was a poet, essayist, and editor, one of the founders and leading members of Russian......
George Buchanan was a Scottish Humanist, educator, and man of letters, who was an eloquent critic of corruption......
Buddhist Hybrid Sanskrit language, Middle Indo-Aryan literary language, a Prākrit dialect heavily infiltrated with......
Bulgarian language, Bulgarian alphabetThe Bulgarian Cyrillic alphabet.South Slavic language written in the Cyrillic......
Eugenius Bulgaris was a Greek Orthodox theologian and liberal arts scholar who disseminated Western thought throughout......
John Bulwer was an English physician, author, and early educator of the deaf, best known for his four late-Renaissance......
Buritanika Kokusai Daihyakka-jiten, first major encyclopaedia of international scope written in the Japanese language.......
Burmese language, the official language of Myanmar (Burma), spoken as a native language by the majority of Burmans......
Sir Richard Burton was an English scholar-explorer and Orientalist who was the first European to discover Lake......
Burushaski language, language spoken primarily in the Hunza, Nagar, and Yasin valleys of northern Pakistan. It......
Bushman languages, loose grouping of languages that confusingly have been considered to be a separate group within......
Buṭrus al-Bustānī was a scholar whose works, notably an Arabic dictionary and the first six volumes of an Arabic......
Byzantine Greek language, an archaic style of Greek that served as the language of administration and of most writing......
Otto von Böhtlingk was a language scholar and lexicographer whose writings and seven-volume Sanskrit–German dictionary......
Gottfried August Bürger was one of the founders of German Romantic ballad literature whose style reflects the renewed......
Kazimieras Būga was a linguist who began the most thorough dictionary of the Lithuanian language and whose extensive......
c, third letter of the alphabet, corresponding to Semitic gimel (which probably derived from an early sign for......
Claude Cahun was a French writer, photographer, Surrealist, and performance artist who was largely written out......
calligraphy, the art of beautiful handwriting. The term may derive from the Greek words for “beauty” (kallos) and......
- Introduction
- Old Hebrew, Scripts, Art
- Arabic, Scripts, Art
- Greek, Handwriting, Scripts
- Byzantine, Illuminated, Manuscripts
- Formal Minuscule, 10th-14th Century
- Latin, Alphabet, Handwriting
- Anglo-Celtic, 5th-13th Century
- Black Letter, Gothic, 9-15th Century
- Writing manuals and copybooks (16th to 18th century)
- Revival, 19th-20th Centuries
Canaanite languages, group of Northern Central or Northwestern Semitic languages including Hebrew, Moabite, Phoenician,......
Charles du Fresne, seigneur du Cange was one of the great French universal scholars of the 17th century, who wrote......
Cantonese language, variety of Chinese spoken by more than 55 million people in Guangdong and southern Guangxi......