Given the complete parallels heard here earlier, shouldn't it really be Crimean Gothic?
2010/9/16 Janusz S. Bień <[email protected]> > On Mon, 09 Aug 2010 [email protected] (Janusz S. Bień) wrote: > > > Thanks for all the comments. > > > > For the time being the puzzle remains unsolved. Perhaps in the future > > somebody will dig through the sources used by the author of the > > dictionary and will find an explanation... > > Dr Marian Ptaszyk (the author of many publications about the > dictionary) pointed to me that "Kimr." is just a typo... It should be > "Krim." meaning the language of Crimean Tatars. > > Best regards > > JSB > > -- > , > dr hab. Janusz S. Bien, prof. UW - Uniwersytet Warszawski (Katedra > Lingwistyki Formalnej) > Prof. Janusz S. Bien - Warsaw University (Department of Formal Linguistics) > [email protected], [email protected], > http://fleksem.klf.uw.edu.pl/~jsbien/<http://fleksem.klf.uw.edu.pl/%7Ejsbien/> > > > -- Szelp, André Szabolcs +43 (650) 79 22 400

