Aliz kalandjai Csodaországban: A Hungarian translation of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland printed in the Old Hungarian Alphabet (Hungarian Edition) - Softcover

Carroll, Lewis

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9781782011590: Aliz kalandjai Csodaországban: A Hungarian translation of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland printed in the Old Hungarian Alphabet (Hungarian Edition)

Synopsis

A rovásírás egy rúnajellegű írás a magyar nyelv lejegyzésére; a rovásírás név rövidített formája, a rovás is használatos. Első feljegyzésünk róla a késő 13. századból való, az első fennmaradt jelsor körülbelül 1490 és 1526 közé tehető. A 20. század során több kísérlet is történt a történelmi ábécé kibővítésére annak érdekében, hogy az jobban igazodjon a modern magyar íráshoz. Ez a kiadás Szilágyi Anikó teljes fordítását rovásírásban tartalmazza Michael Everson által tervezett betűtípusokból szedve. ---- The Old Hungarian alphabet is a runiform script used to write the Hungarian language. It is first mentioned in a written account of the late 13th century; the first surviving alphabetical listing dates to between 1490 and 1526. In the twentieth century several attempts have been under taken to extend the historic alphabet so that it corresponds better to modern Hungarian orthography. This edition of Anikó Szilágyi's translation of "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" is written entirely in that same alphabet, with fonts specially designed by Michael Everson.

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About the Author

Lewis Carroll was the pen name of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, an English writer, mathematician, Anglican deacon, and photographer. Best known for his classics Alice s Adventures in Wonderland, Through the Looking Glass, and Jabberwocky, Carroll was also an accomplished inventor who created an early version of what is today known as Scrabble. The publication of Alice s Adventures in Wonderland in 1865 brought Carroll a certain level of fame, although he continued to supplement his income through his work as a mathematics tutor at Christ Church, Oxford College. Carroll s whimsical characters and nonsensical verse resonated with Victorian-era readers, and his books continue to be enjoyed by numerous modern societies dedicated to his promoting his works.

Sir John Tenniel briefly attended the Royal Academy Schools, but for the most part he was a self taught artist. His illustrations appeared regularly in Punch, but it was the Alice books that confirmed his international reputation as an illustrator. Tenniel was knighted in 1893.

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