

In case of claims by third parties, authors commit their self to defend the interests of the publisher, and shall cover any potential costs. Authors guarantee that the work is their own original creation and does not infringe any statutory or common-law copyright or any proprietary right of any third party.All decisions regarding layout and distribution of the work are in hands of the publisher. Author’s name will be evident in the article in journal. Authors are confirming that they are the authors of the submitting article, which will be published (print and online) in journal Verba Hispanica by Znanstvena založba Filozofske fakultete Univerze v Ljubljani (University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Arts, AškerčLjubljana, Slovenia).The analysis of this terminology reflects the semantic connections established between the various dimensions (weight, space and time) as its semantic reference moves from the spatial domain to the that of time and relationships are attested in the earliest dictionaries of the Spanish language.Īuthors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: These works allow us to verify the transmission of this lexicon, in a stage marked by the growing interest in metrological issues. Amongst the Renaissance sources several studies stand out: Chronographía or Reportorio de los tiempos (1545) by Jerónimo de Chaves, the anonymous book Repertorio de los tiempos (1554) and Chronographía y Repertorio de los tiempos (1585) by Francisco Vicente de Tornamira), a set of treatises which includes the knowledge compiled in the medieval encyclopaedias mentioned above. 560-636) and in the Libro de las propiedades de las cosas of Bartolomé Ánglico (1240), an encyclopaedia that had an extraordinary reception in Western Europe until the sixteenth century. With regard to the former, an example of the cultural transmission of this specialized lexicon can be seen in its reception in The Etymologies of Saint Isidore (c. This study of the ancient divisible units of the hours of day (the terms borrowed from latin: átomo, cuadrante, momento, punto and uncia) use the principal sources of the medieval and Renaissance works. Terminology, Lexicology, Lexicography Abstract
