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  1. Vladimir Antonovich Dybo (Russian: Влади́мир Анто́нович Дыбо́; 30 April 1931 – 7 May 2023) was a Soviet and Russian linguist, Doctor Nauk in Philological Sciences (1979), Professor (1992), Academician of the Russian Academy of Sciences (2011).

  2. History. Andrey Zaliznyak (left) and Vladimir Dybo (right) at a conference dedicated to Dybo's 80th birthday, held at the Russian State University for the Humanities on May 5, 2011. The founders of the school are Vladislav Illich-Svitych and Aharon Dolgopolsky. [1] [2] [3] [4] Vladimir Dybo, [5] Vyacheslav Ivanov, and Andrey ...

  3. Mate Kapović Vladimir Antonovič Dybo (1931–2023): In memoriam I first heard of Vladimir A. Dybo as a young student of linguistics at the University of Zagreb, interested in historical linguistics, sometimes in the early 2000’s, together with the fascinating concept of accentual paradigms.

  4. Dybo was the most prominent scholar of the Moscow accentological school (abbreviated as MAS). Dybos (and the MAS) methodology is first and foremost based on a thorough analy-sis of data from a wide array of primary sources — including different Slavic languages, dia-lects and old manuscripts with accentual markings5.

  5. titus.uni-frankfurt.de › personal › galeriaVladimir Dybo, 1931 - 2023

    In 1962, Vladimir Dybo successfully defended his candidate of sciences thesis, entitled "The issue of correlation between two Balto-Slavic series of accent correspondences in the verbal system". However, it was also in the 1960s that Dybo signed several open letters on human rights authored by Soviet dissidents ...

  6. Vladimir A. Dybo was born on April 30, 1931 in the village of Pyrohivka (Пирогівка = Russian Пирогoвка) on the Desna River in the Sumskaja Region in the northernmost part of Ukraine. His father, Anton Timofeevič Dybo, was an employee of the railroad system, and during the Russian Civil War worked as an anti-communist political activist.

  7. 1 de dic. de 2023 · Article Vladimir Antonovič Dybo (1931–2023): In memoriam / Памяти Владимира Антоновича Дыбо (1931–2023) was published on December 1, 2023 in the journal Journal of Language Relationship (volume 21, issue 1-2).