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Jonas Jablonskis (Lithuanian pronunciation: [joːnɐs jɐbˈɫɔnskɪs]; 30 December 1860, in Kubilėliai, Šakiai district – 23 February 1930, in Kaunas) was a distinguished Lithuanian linguist and one of the founders of the standard Lithuanian language. [1]
The first issues were edited by Jonas Jablonskis and Povilas Višinskis, later ones by Jonas Kriaučiūnas, Juozas Tumas-Vaižgantas, Jonas Vileišis, and others. At first the public was interested in the newspaper and its circulation reached 6,000 copies in 1905.
Jonas Jablonskis (1860–1930), Lithuanian linguist who standardized the Lithuanian language; Jeremy Yablonski (born 1980), a Canadian ice hockey left winger who currently plays for the Binghamton Senators in the AHL; Johann Theodor Jablonski (1654–1731), German lexicographer
Marijampolė Rygiškių Jonas Gymnasium (Lithuanian: Marijampolės Rygiškių Jono gimnazija) is a secondary school in Marijampolė, Lithuania.It is named after Rygiškių Jonas, one of the pen names of linguist Jonas Jablonskis who was one of the gymnasium's alumni.
Academic articles on Lithuanian language and attempts to standardize it were published by Jonas Jablonskis. Future President of Lithuania Kazys Grinius also contributed to the newspaper. [16] Because the publication was illegal, many authors used various pen names and pseudonyms that changed frequently; a few articles were unsigned.
After Juška's death, the dictionary was edited by numerous other linguists – Vatroslav Jagić, Filipp Fortunatov, Vytautas Juška (Jonas' son), Jonas Jablonskis, Jurgis Šlapelis , Kazimieras Būga [101] – but the work was very slow and only three volumes were published over the next four decades (letters A–D in 1897, letters E–J in ...
Jonas Kriščiukaitis, Kazimieras Kriščiukaitis Kaunas Garrison Officers' Club Building ( Lithuanian : Kauno įgulos karininkų ramovė ) is a building in Kaunas , Lithuania . At construction cost of over 1.27 million Lithuanian litas , it was one of the most luxurious buildings built in interwar Lithuania.
Her knowledge of Lithuanian was valued by linguist Jonas Jablonskis who wanted her to help editing Vilniaus žinios in 1904. [14] In July 1898, Juškytė together with her sister Marija, Petkevičaitė-Bitė, Povilas Višinskis, and Petras Avižonis visited Kudirka. [15]