Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Professor Elżbieta Mańczak-Wohlfeld’s Publications
- Tabula gratulatoria
- Bilingual Learners’ Dictionaries in the Lexicographic Landscape
- Feel Free To… A Comparative Study of Phraseological Borrowing
- What’s in a Name? Does the Proliferation of Pejorative Terms Such as Denglis(c)h and Similar Items in German Attest to Neo-puristic Attitudes Towards Anglicisms?
- English in Confrontation with Languages and Cultural Heritage of Asian Countries: Promotion or Threat?
- Slavic Dirъ in the Arab-Muslim Geographical Literature
- Linguistic Landscapes: The Multilingual Cityscape of Kraków
- On Russenorsk -om in Particular and on Etymology and Creolistics in General
- Ponglish in the British Isles: A Few Sociolinguistic Remarks on the Issue
- Language Contact and Identity: Three Possible Scenarios
- European Echoes of English, South African Style?
- Open Spelling of Nominal Compounds in Contemporary Swedish and the Question of English Influence
- To -s or Not to -s? Plural Marking on Anglicisms in Spoken German
- Classification of Pseudo-anglicisms in Japanese
- Underdeterminacy, Indeterminacy and Speaker’s Intentions
- Globalisation and the Linguistic and Cultural Changes in Poland Within the Last Seventy Years
- Playful Pleas(e): Formal and Functional Adaptations of English Please in Serbian
- Gustaf Peringer’s Karaim Biblical Material Revisited. A Linguistic Commentary on a Text Sample from 1691
- Yiddish Borrowings in American English: Slavic Connections
- Linguistic Trespassing: Observations on Multilingual Europe
- Why is He Who Tells the Truth Chased Out of Nine Villages: The Number Nine in Turkish Language and Culture
- English Cyber- Words Across European Languages
- Beliefs and Customs in the Phrasematics of the Podtatrze (Sub-Tatra) Region
- Graphic and Orthotypographic Aspects of Anglicisms in the Field of Sports
- Language Contact and Null Subjects: The Past Tense in Kashubian
- Slavic Languages in Contact, 3: The Methodological Importance of Balkan Slavic for Turkish Historical Dialectology, or Croatian and Serbian neimar, Bulgarian maimar(in) ‘Chief Architect’
- Indirect Language Contact and the Celtic Elements in Polish
- (I’m) Just Saying and (Tak) Tylko Mówię: A Parallel Corpus Study
- News on Instagram: The Use of the Social Medium by The Guardian and Gazeta Wyborcza
- Vowel Adaptation in English Words in Slovak
- Foreign Influences in Polish Dialectal Plant Names
- Hipsterskie fashionistki keżualowo drinkują na klabingu w Lądku… English Borrowings in Informal Polish and Their Lexical Fields
- On Maximality Modification in the Psych Domain: Evidence from Polish
- Formal Variance in Polish Adjectival Anglicisms
On Russenorsk -om in Particular and on Etymology and Creolistics in General
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 October 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Professor Elżbieta Mańczak-Wohlfeld’s Publications
- Tabula gratulatoria
- Bilingual Learners’ Dictionaries in the Lexicographic Landscape
- Feel Free To… A Comparative Study of Phraseological Borrowing
- What’s in a Name? Does the Proliferation of Pejorative Terms Such as Denglis(c)h and Similar Items in German Attest to Neo-puristic Attitudes Towards Anglicisms?
- English in Confrontation with Languages and Cultural Heritage of Asian Countries: Promotion or Threat?
- Slavic Dirъ in the Arab-Muslim Geographical Literature
- Linguistic Landscapes: The Multilingual Cityscape of Kraków
- On Russenorsk -om in Particular and on Etymology and Creolistics in General
- Ponglish in the British Isles: A Few Sociolinguistic Remarks on the Issue
- Language Contact and Identity: Three Possible Scenarios
- European Echoes of English, South African Style?
- Open Spelling of Nominal Compounds in Contemporary Swedish and the Question of English Influence
- To -s or Not to -s? Plural Marking on Anglicisms in Spoken German
- Classification of Pseudo-anglicisms in Japanese
- Underdeterminacy, Indeterminacy and Speaker’s Intentions
- Globalisation and the Linguistic and Cultural Changes in Poland Within the Last Seventy Years
- Playful Pleas(e): Formal and Functional Adaptations of English Please in Serbian
- Gustaf Peringer’s Karaim Biblical Material Revisited. A Linguistic Commentary on a Text Sample from 1691
- Yiddish Borrowings in American English: Slavic Connections
- Linguistic Trespassing: Observations on Multilingual Europe
- Why is He Who Tells the Truth Chased Out of Nine Villages: The Number Nine in Turkish Language and Culture
- English Cyber- Words Across European Languages
- Beliefs and Customs in the Phrasematics of the Podtatrze (Sub-Tatra) Region
- Graphic and Orthotypographic Aspects of Anglicisms in the Field of Sports
- Language Contact and Null Subjects: The Past Tense in Kashubian
- Slavic Languages in Contact, 3: The Methodological Importance of Balkan Slavic for Turkish Historical Dialectology, or Croatian and Serbian neimar, Bulgarian maimar(in) ‘Chief Architect’
- Indirect Language Contact and the Celtic Elements in Polish
- (I’m) Just Saying and (Tak) Tylko Mówię: A Parallel Corpus Study
- News on Instagram: The Use of the Social Medium by The Guardian and Gazeta Wyborcza
- Vowel Adaptation in English Words in Slovak
- Foreign Influences in Polish Dialectal Plant Names
- Hipsterskie fashionistki keżualowo drinkują na klabingu w Lądku… English Borrowings in Informal Polish and Their Lexical Fields
- On Maximality Modification in the Psych Domain: Evidence from Polish
- Formal Variance in Polish Adjectival Anglicisms
Summary
Introduction
Russenorsk (or moja på tvoja, as some of its users apparently called it) is traditionally described as a double-source, stable, non-extended pidgin. It is generally held that Russenorsk was current for 141 years and that it died out before 1920. Russenorsk is special because of the social status of its speakers: the Russians and the Norwegians involved in Pomor (barter) trade in Northern Norway were equals. Put differently, there was no party so dominant that could have paved the way to a scenario leading to creolization.
Hayden (2019: 77) estimates that 35% of Russenorsk vocabulary is of Norwegian (N) origin, 43% of Russian (R) origin, around 8% is the result of convergence and coinage (see below) and the remaining 15% comes from a multitude of languages: Low German, High German, Dutch, English (some items via the Solombala pidgin), Kven (the language of Finnish émigrés that settled in Northern Norway in the 18th and 19th centuries), Sámi, Swedish and even French.
The label “convergence and coinage” refers to words such as motrom, from N morgen (or morn) ‘morning’ and R utrom ‘morning’, or mangeli+, from N mange ‘numerous’ (cf. Russian mnogo ‘many’) and the R particle (clitic) li.
The three most salient grammatical elements include the “noun marker” -a, the “verb marker” -om+ and the preposition po. As for the first two morphemes, they only have a class-marking function, though neither -a nor -om is systematically used and there are numerous instances where a noun or a verb appears bare.
If the assumption is made (as some authors did in the past) that convergence also played a role in the origin of these elements, then it can be suggested that:
(1) “noun marker” -a is a merge of the Russian genitive singular masculine following some numerals (the so-called “partitive”) or the nominative singular feminine, and the Norwegian definite article for feminine nouns.
(2) “verb marker” -om+ is a merge of the Russian first person plural and hortative -jom and, perhaps, Cape Dutch pidgin -om. It is connected with Solombala pidgin -om. Beginning with Broch (1927), some authors have maintained that the Swedish hortative -um can be the sole source of it.
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- Languages in Contact and ContrastA Festschrift for Professor Elżbieta Mańczak-Wohlfeld on the Occasion of Her 70th Birthday, pp. 133 - 148Publisher: Jagiellonian University PressPrint publication year: 2020