Aleksandar Belić
Aleksandar Belić (August 15, 1876 – February 26, 1960) was a Serbian linguist.[1]
Biography
Belić was born in Belgrade. After studying Slavic languages in Belgrade, Odessa, and Moscow, he received his PhD in Leipzig in 1900. He worked at the University of Belgrade and Belgrade Higher School during his academic career. He was a member and longtime president of the Serbian Academy of Sciences.[1]
Belić is generally considered the leading Serbian linguist of the first half of the twentieth century. His research dealt with comparative Slavic studies, general linguistics, Serbo-Croatian dialectology, and syntax. He authored Pravopis srpskohrvatskog književnog jezika (Standard Serbo-Croatian Normative Guide, 1923) which was based on a strictly phonological spelling principle. He wrote extensively on Čakavian and Kajkavian dialects and made a significant contribution to Slavic accentology with his discovery of the Slavic neoacute accent in Čakavian. Belić introduced the tripartite division of Kajkavian based on the reflexes of Proto-Slavic *tj and *dj, which was first published in Stanojević's Narodna enciklopedija srpsko-hrvatsko-slovenačka (Serbo-Croatian-Slovene National Encyclopedia, 1927), although disproved by later dialectology studies. He contributed to the acceptance of the so-called Belgrade style of standard Serbian. During his entire life he was a consistent advocate of a unified Serbo-Croatian language.[1]
He died in Belgrade.
Selected Works
- Dijalekti istočne i južne Srbije,
- Dijalektološka karta srpskog jezika,
- Akcentske studije,
- O dvojini u slovenskim jezicima,
- Galički dijalekt,
- O jezičkoj prirodi i jezičkom razvitku (1941)
- Pravopis srpsko-hrvatskog književnog jezika (1923)
References
- 1 2 3 "Belić, Aleksandar", Croatian Encyclopedia (in Croatian), Leksikografski zavod Miroslav Krleža, 1999–2009, retrieved February 28, 2014