Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. No Jacket. May have limited writing in cover pages. Pages are unmarked. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. No Jacket. May have limited writing in cover pages. Pages are unmarked. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.
Condition: very good. Gut/Very good: Buch bzw. Schutzumschlag mit wenigen Gebrauchsspuren an Einband, Schutzumschlag oder Seiten. / Describes a book or dust jacket that does show some signs of wear on either the binding, dust jacket or pages.
US$ 5.70
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardcover. Condition: Très bon. Ammareal reverse jusqu'à 15% du prix net de cet article à des organisations caritatives. ENGLISH DESCRIPTION Book Condition: Used, Very good. Ammareal gives back up to 15% of this item's net price to charity organizations.
Published by Galician Bazar, New York, 1935
Seller: Ground Zero Books, Ltd., Silver Spring, MD, U.S.A.
Cardboard covers. Condition: as is. Seventeenth Printing. 93 pages, illus., text somewhat darkened, boards separated from text, boards quite worn and soiled, spine missing. Text in Russian. Pencil notations inside front board. Old Russian style primer and reader, with pictures.
Published by Gos. ucheb.-pedagog., Moscow, 1964
Seller: Hoffman Books, ABAA, IOBA, Columbus, OH, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. The 12th edition of the Svadkovskij primer, analyzed in "Worlds for beginning readers" by Wendelin Sroka. (Coen 2005 IARTEM conference on learning and educational media). 95 pages. Pictorial boards. The covers are slightly toned with rubbed corners. The contents show some toning, otherwise bright and complete.
Seller: Sell Books, Elland, YORKS, United Kingdom
US$ 66.80
Quantity: 1 available
Add to baskethardcover. Condition: Good. Our good condition books are generally good for reading but not for gifting or collecting. They could have imperfections such as creasing, fanning, inscriptions, margin notes, yellowing, staining on edge or cover or pages, bumps, scuffs, etc etc (sometimes multiple of these). It's a wide category that encompasses anything that isn't almost-new down to anything that is slightly better than poor. We would NOT recommend gifting Good books - these should be considered reading copies. Our books are dispatched from a Yorkshire former cotton mill. We list via barcode/ISBN so please note that the images are stock images and may not be the exact copy you receive, furthermore the details about edition and year might not be accurate as many publishers reuse the same ISBN for multiple editions and as we simply scan a barcode or enter an ISBN we do not check the validity of the edition data when listing. If you're looking for an exact edition please don't order (at least not without checking with us first, although we don't always have time to check). We aim to dispatch prompty, the service used will depend on order value and book size. We can ship to most countries, see our shipping policies. Payment is via Abe only.
Condition: good. A copy that has been read, remains in good condition. All pages are intact, and the cover is intact. The spine and cover show signs of wear. Pages can include notes and highlighting and show signs of wear, and the copy can include "From the library of" labels or previous owner inscriptions. 100% GUARANTEE! Shipped with delivery confirmation, if you're not satisfied with purchase please return item! Ships via media mail.
Published by 1802, 1802
Seller: Charlotte Du Rietz Rare Books (ILAB), Stockholm, Sweden
First Edition
4to. Pp. 66. With text in Cyrillic and Arabic types. Later grey paper wrappers. Stamp on title page. Ownership signature (E. Henderson) on front pastedown. First edition of the first primer of the Tatar language, a Turkic language mainly spoken in modern Tatarstan (European Russia) and Siberia. (Not to be confused with Crimean Tatar or Siberian Tatar which are closely related but belong to different subgroups of the Kipchak languages). Rare.Compiled by Niyat Bka Atnometev a Siberian Tatar under the guidance of the priest Iosif Ivanovich Giganov (1764-1800?). Giganov was a teacher at the Tobolsk Seminar and is considered the founder of the modern Tatar dialectology school. He compiled the first Tatar grammar and Russian-Tatar dictionary, published in 1801 and 1804 respectively, posthumously.Provenance: We assume it has belonged to Ebenezer Henderson (1784-1858), Scottish minister and linguist who in 1822 was invited to assist the Russian Bible Society in translations of the Bible into different languages spoken in the Russian empire). Not in Loewenthal, The Turkic Languages of Central Asia.
Language: Finno-Ugrian (Other)
Published by Utverzhdeno Narkomprostom RSFSR, Leningrad, 1937
Seller: Michael Fagan Fine Art & Rare Books, Newton, MA, U.S.A.
First Edition
Soft cover. Condition: Fine. I.V. Val'ter (illustrator). 1st Edition. Quarto 26x18 cm., wrappers, 121 pp. I.V. Val'ter, cover & illus. A grammar and writing primer for Nenets people in the Nenets Autonomous Okrug, published by the Educational and Pedagogical Department. Nenets is an Uralic language distantly related to the Finnic language group. G.N. Prokof'ev (1897-1942) was a Russian ethnographer who worked on languages and cultures of Siberia, particularly of the Enets and Selkup people. This grammar, like many that were distributed in minority languages of the USSR, is heavily laced with propaganda to inculcate young readers from an early age with Marxist-Leninist world views that was inseparable from language and learning. The Nenets are also known as Samoyeds or Yuraks who live in the far north of the Arkhangelsk Oblast. This is a rare work, with only one institutional holding found worldwide in microform (Columbia). A very fine copy.
Kyiv: "Radians'ka shkola", 1985. Quarto (31.5 × 24.5). Original printed quarter cloth over boards; [110] leaves of braille text. Light soil to boards; corners slightly bumped; private exlibris stamp to title; else about very good. A Ukrainian braille primer for blind children, printed from the standard textbook of those years, the 18th edition of "A Primer (In Ukrainian)" by Bonifatiy and Mariia Sazheniuk. The primer was printed in Kharkiv, which was the centre of Soviet education for the deaf-blind due to the work of the Ukrainian psychologist and educator Ivan Sokolyansky (1889-1960), who was a pioneer of Soviet study of the development of children with disabilities (defectology). Born in Kuban in a Ukrainian speaking family and educated at the education faculty of The Psychoneurological Institute in St. Petersburg, he published his first work on teaching Ukrainian to blind children titled "On Teaching Ukrainian Deaf-Mute Children Their Native language" in 1911. In 1925 Sokolyansky founded the Kharkov Institute for the Deaf-Blind, a school-clinic where he developed innovative methods for teaching deaf-blind children, including a machine for transcribing printed text into braille for the blind. The school-clinic was closed in 1938 after Sokolyansky's arrest for "nationalist activities", though he was released in 1939 on Maxim Gorki's insistence because the Soviet writer admired the work of Sokolyansky. The students of Sokolyansky's school-clinic were transferred to the Kharkiv School for the Blind (today Kharkiv V. G Koralenko Special Education Complex), which operated continuously throughout the Soviet period, with a capacity of about 200 students. One of 120 copies printed. As of February 2025, not in KVK, OCLC.