ustav
See also: ústav
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Old Church Slavonic оуставъ (ustavŭ). Cognate of устав in modern Bulgarian and modern Russian.
Noun
ustav (plural ustavs)
- (palaeography) The earliest style of Cyrillic writing developed from Greek uncial in the late 9th century, predominant in the 11th–14th centuries.
- The handsomely fashioned writing is of the type described as polu-ustav (semi-uncial), which is midway between the stately ustav and the cursive, . . . —A. Aronson, Rabindranath Through Western Eyes
- (Eastern Orthodoxy) A church statute prescribing daily prayer, feast days, and fasts.
- While most of the service books are employed only in the conduct of public devotion, the psalter and the ustav are widely read works that are found in every household. —David Scheffel, In the Shadow of Antichrist: The Old Believers of Alberta
Usage notes
Ustav and poluustav writing is often referred to as Cyrillic uncial and semi-uncial script, but the comparison to the Western European style is considered inadequate by some palaeographers, so the Slavic words are also used in English-language writing.
Usually italicized.
Quotations
- For quotations using this term, see Citations:ustav.
Derived terms
- (palaeography): poluustav, polu-ustav, semi-ustav
Romanian
Etymology
Borrowed from Old Church Slavonic оуставъ (ustavŭ).
Declension
References
- ustav in Academia Română, Micul dicționar academic, ediția a II-a, Bucharest: Univers Enciclopedic, 2010. →ISBN
Serbo-Croatian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ûstaːʋ/
- Hyphenation: u‧stav
Declension
References
- “ustav” in Hrvatski jezični portal
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