OCR
RACHEL MIKos lynam, C.: Moneon domoe syün Oyp. YICBIH X9BI3NMÜH Tasap, Yıraanbaarap 1989 [Characteristics of Mongolian Legends] Hasan-Rokem, Galit — Shulmin, David (eds.): Untying the Knot: On Riddles and Other Enigmatic Modes. Oxford University Press, New York — Oxford 1996. Kapisovska, Veronika: Spatial Orientation of the Mongols and its Reflection in Mongolian. Mongolica Pragensia ‘03, Ethnolinguistics and Sociolinguistics in Synchrony and Diachrony, Prague 2003, pp. 77-122. KapiSovska, Veronika: Some Remarks on Loanwords in Mongolian Lexical Pairs. Mongolo-Tibetica Pragensia ‘11, Linguistics, Ethnolinguistics, Religion and Culture, Vol. 4, No. 1, Prague 2011, pp. 87-102. Kara, Gyôrgy: Mongol-magyar szôtär. Terebess Kiad6, Budapest 1998 [MongolianHungarian Dictionary] Kullmann, Rita — Tserenpil, D.: Mongolian Grammar. Under the Auspices of Institute of Language and Literature, Academy of Sciences, Ulaanbaatar 2001. Lessing, Ferdinand: Mongolian-English Dictionary. University of California Press, Berkeley and Los Angeles 1960. JloBop, T. — Onsnäxyrar I: Mouzon apôbin onbcozo masaap. IlmuHx113x yXxaaHbı aKkazeMH, X911 30XHOJIBIH XYP99719H, YaaanGaarap 1990 [Enigmas and Puzzles of Mongolia] Lubsangdorji, J.: Buddhist Lamas and Mongolian. Mongolica Pragensia ‘02, Linguistics, Ethnolinguistics, Religion and Culture, Prague 2002, pp. 101-128. Lubsangdorji, Jugderiin — Vacek, Jaroslav: Colloquial Mongolian: An Introductory Intensive Course. Vols. 1, 2. Charles University in Prague, Philosophical Faculty, Institute of South and Central Asian Studies, Seminar of Mongolian Studies, Triton, Prague 2004. Maranda, Elli Köngäs: The Logic of Riddles. Centre interuniversitaire d’ Etudes sur les Lettres, les Arts et les Traditions (CELAT), Faculté des Lettres, Université Laval, Québec 1971. Mehlman, Jeffrey: The “Floating Signifier”: From Lévi-Strauss to Lacan. Yale French Studies, No. 48, French Freud: Structural Studies in Psychoanalysis, Yale University Press, 1972, pp. 10-37. Mikos, Rachel: The Becomings of Narrative: Transformation and Transmutation in the Tibetan and Mongolian “Enchanted Corpse” Cycles. Unpublished MA thesis, Charles University in Prague, Institute of South and Central Asia, Seminar of Mongolian Studies 2012. Mikos, Rachel: Ruined Words, Evasive Referents, and Emic Phonemes in Mongolian Riddles, Part 1. Mongolo-Tibetica Pragensia ‘14 Linguistics, Ethnolinguistics, Religion and Culture Volume 7, No. 1 (2014), Charles University in Prague, Philosophical Faculty, Institute of South and Central Asian Studies, Seminar of Mongolian Studies, pp. 44-189. 164