Tchernichovsky Prize

The Tchernichovsky Prize is an Israeli prize awarded to individuals for exemplary works of translation into Hebrew. It is awarded by the municipality of Tel Aviv-Yafo.[1] Although initially awarded annually, it is now awarded every two years.

Tchernichovsky Prize
Awarded forExemplary translation to Hebrew
CountryIsrael
Presented byTel Aviv-Yafo Municipality
First awarded1942 (first award 1943)
Websitehttps://www.tel-aviv.gov.il/Pages/ItemPage.aspx?webId=f09859c7-1a46-40e0-8968-9ae31388b659&listId=229c1b0e-698e-4b08-af1e-e769ab00a112&itemId=11 

The prize was founded, in the name of the poet Shaul Tchernichovsky, following a 1942 resolution of the municipality. Tchernichovsky himself participated in formulating the policies for the grant of the award and attended the first award ceremony for the prize in 1943.[1]

Recipients

gollark: Wait, do lemon bills use powers of really big primes or something?
gollark: OnStat is written in Nim, and apart from me forgetting to close a file handle has been VERY reliability.
gollark: There is a second compiler thing using LLVM.
gollark: It also has good C interoperability, as it compiles to C or C++.
gollark: It has garbage collection, but you can use the ORC collector to make it basically do reference counting (except on possibly cyclic things).

References


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