@ARTICLE{Lewaszkiewicz_Tadeusz_“Slovenian/Carinthian/Jaun_2021, author={Lewaszkiewicz, Tadeusz and Wydra, Wiesław}, volume={No LXX}, journal={Rocznik Slawistyczny}, pages={69-86}, howpublished={online}, year={2021}, publisher={Komitet Słowianoznawstwa PAN}, abstract={The numerals in question are used to number the pages of a medieval Latin manuscript. These are cardinal numerals, transcribed as follows: edno, četiry, pęt, šest, sedem, osem, devęt, desęt. In addition, two ordinal numerals, drugi and tretiji, also appear there. The words analysed here are undoubtedly Slavic numerals, but it is not possible to assign them with certainty to a specific Slavic language. The most probable theory of their origin links them to the Slovenian dialectal area in Carinthia (mostly due to attested continuation of Proto‑Slavic * ę, the eno < edno numeral and the phonetic spelling of the ordinal numeral as tretji), although a Polish linguistic substrate cannot be definitely ruled out due to attested nasal vowels.}, type={Artykuły / Articles}, title={“Slovenian/Carinthian/Jaun Valley dialect” numerals found in a Latin manuscript dated to the third quarter of 12th century (Heiligenkreuz, Cod. 250)}, URL={http://czasopisma.pan.pl/Content/121639/PDF-MASTER/2021-RSLW-04-Lewaszkiewicz-Wydra.pdf}, doi={10.24425/rslaw.2021.138340}, keywords={Slovenian language, Slovenian numerals, Slavic and Slavonic nasal vowels}, }