Stanko Klinar Explained

Stanko Klinar
Birth Name:Stanislav Klinar
Birth Date:April 29, 1933
Birth Place:Hrušica, Kingdom of Yugoslavia
Death Place:Ljubljana, Slovenia

Stanislav "Stanko" Klinar (April 29, 1933 – April 13, 2023) was a Slovene English-language specialist, translator, and author of literature about mountain hiking.[1] [2] [3]

Life

Stanko Klinar was born in Hrušica in northwestern Slovenia. He graduated from high school in Jesenice and then studied English and German at the University of Ljubljana's Faculty of Arts, graduating in 1956.[1] [2]

Klinar performed his military service in 1957/58, and then from 1958 to 1960 he taught English and history at Prežihov Voranc Primary School in Jesenice. From 1960 to 1968 he was a teacher of English, German,[4] and Slovene at Jesenice High School and at the same time at some other secondary schools in Upper Carniola and for continuing education courses in Jesenice. In 1968, he became a lecturer of modern English at the Department of English and American Studies at the University of Ljubljana's Faculty of Arts,[5] and in 1985 he was appointed a senior lecturer in English. He lectured on translation and mountaineering and the connection between them (nomenclature, orthography, and terminology) in various courses and at various educational institutions, especially for the Slovenian Association of Scientific and Technical Translators (DZTPS) and for mountain guides, he participated in compiling the multilingual Planinski terminološki slovar (Mountain Terminology Dictionary, 2002),[6] and he wrote forewords to volumes on mountain hiking by other authors—for example, Tone Škarja's Kangčendzenga – Gora usode (Kangchenjunga: Mountain of Destiny) and Jože Mihelič's Dober dan, Triglavski narodni park (Hello, Triglav National Park). In his youth, he himself was a mountaineer and mountain guide, as well as a competitive skier.[7] [8] He received his doctorate in 1996, and he became an assistant professor in 1997.[1] [2]

Klinar translated four volumes of fiction into Slovene, including by Arthur Conan Doyle and Zane Grey, and he translated the book Zakladi Slovenije (Treasures of Slovenia) into English.[1]

Stanko Klinar had four children and six grandchildren, and he lived in Ljubljana and Mojstrana. He died in Ljubljana on April 13, 2023, at the age of 89.[9]

Bibliography

Linguistics

Mountaineering

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Jamar . Nina . Stanko Klinar . Obrazi slovenskih pokrajin . Mestna knjižnica Kranj . April 14, 2023 . 2020.
  2. Book: Eva Sicherl . V družbi z jezikom in gorami: zbornik ob jubileju Stanka Klinarja . 2018 . Znanstvena založba Filozofske fakultete . Ljubljana . 5–7 . Stanko Klinar.
  3. Mihelič . Jože Andrej . Osebnosti: dr. Stanko Klinar . Svet pod Triglavom . 2009 . 13 . 12.
  4. Book: Samide . Irena . Valenčič Arh . Urška . 100 let germanistike na Slovenskem . 2021 . Znanstvena založba Filozofske fakultete Univerze v Ljubljani . Ljubljana . 197, 212.
  5. Book: Pompe . Gregor . Slavnostni zbornik ob 100-letnici Filozofske fakultete Univerze v Ljubljani . 2019 . Znanstvena založba Filozofske fakultete Univerze v Ljubljani . Ljubljana . 23.
  6. Book: Mlač . Bine . Humar . Marjeta . Klinar . Stanko . Leskošek . Bojan . Pollak . Bojan . Savenc . Franci . Šegula . Pavle . Vengust . Albin . Zupet . Stanislav Bojan . Planinski terminološki slovar: slovensko-angleško-nemško-francosko-italijanski slovar planinskega, alpinističnega, plezalskega izrazja . 2002 . Založba ZRC, ZRC SAZU . Ljubljana . 9.
  7. News: Sun Valley Pair Trail in Finals of Yugoslav Meet . Idaho Daily Statesman . 17 March 1958 . Boise, ID . 18 . April 14, 2023 . Newspapers.com.
  8. News: Jahorinski pokal . April 14, 2023 . Slovenski poročevalec . 64 . March 17, 1958 . 8.
  9. News: Stanko Klinar 1933–2023 . April 16, 2023 . Društvo gore-ljudje . April 15, 2023.