Their output from these endeavors has included dictionaries, monographs, computer collections and databases, as well as a large historical Russian music library.
[6] The journal's page on the Russian Language Institute's website claims a category "B" ranking from ERIH.
It has been co-published by the Ural University Press and the Russian Language Institute since 2004 and continues an eponymous periodical collection of articles, Problems of Onomastics, originally titled Problems of Toponomastics until 1972,[10] edited in Sverdlovsk from 1962 to 1991.
Серия литературы и языка) was first published during Imperial Russia from 1852 through 1863, and then following a 33-year pause, publication was resumed in 1896 and continued uninterrupted throughout the revolutions of 1917, spanning the entire Soviet era.
It continues to be published as of August, 2014, though the journal name has changed several times, as has the governing authority responsible for publication oversight.
[12] Current issues can be accessed through the National Academy of Sciences "Russian Literature and Folklore" (ESF) online database.
[14] The Slavic Linguistic Atlas (Russian Общеславянский лингвистический атлас) represents ongoing work, beginning in 1958, with several periodic progress reports being issued over the following decades.