
Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Table of contents
- A dialogue about the etymology of Yiddish páze
- Slavic-Germanic hybridisation in the Vilamovicean language
- A neglected Common Slavic word family for ‘Nymphaeaceae’
- Non-Indo-European features of the Tocharian dialects
- Again on the so-called etymological formulae
- Noun formation in modern Upper Sorbian (selected issues)
- The treatment of pagoda in etymological dictionaries
- The etymological connection between ἐνίπτω, ἐνίψω, ἴψαο, (προ)ΐαψε, ἐνένῑπε and ἠνίπαπε
- Bulgarian borrowings in Hungarian: the problem of reflecting *q
- Daps, epulum et sollemnis : une famille méconnue en latin
- Distinguishing Kipchak and Turkish words in Polish documents
- On the Yeniseian Arin word teminkur ‘ore’
- Weitere Ergänzungen zu W. Leslaus Untersuchungen des arabischen Lehnguts im Amharischen
- Bulg. tarikàt ‘Gauner’
- The origin of English hire (noun and verb), being also a look at the state of the art and the etymology of Germanic *hūs ‘house’
- Türkismen in deutschen Wörterbüchern
- A lovely alternative: Proto-Slavic *ljubo
- A short history of Cornish lexicography
- Phraseologische Glossen – ein Differenzierungsversuch an Beispielen aus ausgewählten deutsch-polnischen Wörterbüchern
- On Latin strāgulum and strāgēs: -g- and analogy
- Compiling dictionaries of defunct (?) languages: Thracian elements in Romanian
- Google Books as a source of historical data: the entry for macaroni in OED3
- Quelques notes lexicales sur le Vocabulaire de la langue turque de Joseph von Preindl
- Lueli
- IE *bheu-‘to be’: a typologically motivated etymology
- Gothic aibr ‘gift, offering’
- Phonetic adaptation of Arabic loanwords in Argenti's Ottoman Turkish (1533). Part 1. Consonants and semivowels
- Vier türkische Etymologien (oder ufak uşakların „yuvarladıkları“ yufka)
- Les noms des produits d'hygiène et de beauté dans le Waaren-Lexicon de Pf. A. Nemnich (1797) .
- Preliminary notes on linguistic documents from the von Celsings’ 18th century Ottoman collection
- Let's talk like a Turk with a Manchu or a story of a certain text from Professor Stanisław Kałużyński's collection
- Winter's law in nasal-infix verbs in Baltic
- Türkçe alçak Kelimesinin Etimolojisi Üzerine
- Altuigurisches Gold
Distinguishing Kipchak and Turkish words in Polish documents
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 January 2018
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Table of contents
- A dialogue about the etymology of Yiddish páze
- Slavic-Germanic hybridisation in the Vilamovicean language
- A neglected Common Slavic word family for ‘Nymphaeaceae’
- Non-Indo-European features of the Tocharian dialects
- Again on the so-called etymological formulae
- Noun formation in modern Upper Sorbian (selected issues)
- The treatment of pagoda in etymological dictionaries
- The etymological connection between ἐνίπτω, ἐνίψω, ἴψαο, (προ)ΐαψε, ἐνένῑπε and ἠνίπαπε
- Bulgarian borrowings in Hungarian: the problem of reflecting *q
- Daps, epulum et sollemnis : une famille méconnue en latin
- Distinguishing Kipchak and Turkish words in Polish documents
- On the Yeniseian Arin word teminkur ‘ore’
- Weitere Ergänzungen zu W. Leslaus Untersuchungen des arabischen Lehnguts im Amharischen
- Bulg. tarikàt ‘Gauner’
- The origin of English hire (noun and verb), being also a look at the state of the art and the etymology of Germanic *hūs ‘house’
- Türkismen in deutschen Wörterbüchern
- A lovely alternative: Proto-Slavic *ljubo
- A short history of Cornish lexicography
- Phraseologische Glossen – ein Differenzierungsversuch an Beispielen aus ausgewählten deutsch-polnischen Wörterbüchern
- On Latin strāgulum and strāgēs: -g- and analogy
- Compiling dictionaries of defunct (?) languages: Thracian elements in Romanian
- Google Books as a source of historical data: the entry for macaroni in OED3
- Quelques notes lexicales sur le Vocabulaire de la langue turque de Joseph von Preindl
- Lueli
- IE *bheu-‘to be’: a typologically motivated etymology
- Gothic aibr ‘gift, offering’
- Phonetic adaptation of Arabic loanwords in Argenti's Ottoman Turkish (1533). Part 1. Consonants and semivowels
- Vier türkische Etymologien (oder ufak uşakların „yuvarladıkları“ yufka)
- Les noms des produits d'hygiène et de beauté dans le Waaren-Lexicon de Pf. A. Nemnich (1797) .
- Preliminary notes on linguistic documents from the von Celsings’ 18th century Ottoman collection
- Let's talk like a Turk with a Manchu or a story of a certain text from Professor Stanisław Kałużyński's collection
- Winter's law in nasal-infix verbs in Baltic
- Türkçe alçak Kelimesinin Etimolojisi Üzerine
- Altuigurisches Gold
Summary
General remarks
It is a well-known fact that language contact leads to adoption of some elements of lexicon and structure of a language into another. Since the influence of Turkish on Polish resulted in the adoption of Turkish lexical units by Polish, Polish studies concentrated on loanwords. Although the definition of the loanword is simple and does not seem to raise problems, in practice the researcher is often faced with the difficulty if a lexical unit is the loanword or not. The first problem to be solved is the border between the loanword and the foreign word. The loanword mostly designates a word taken from another language and at least partly adapted or naturalized, whereas the foreign word retains its foreignness. It is true that some authors do not distinguish these two types of borrowed words, e.g. in Crystal's dictionary (1991: 205) the loan is defined as “a linguistic unit (usually a lexical item) which has come to be used in a language or dialect other than the one where it originated” in a general way and there is no entry like the foreign word at all. Until this question is not solved, the researcher has to pick up all Turkic words from the documents which suggest that these words were used. At this point another problem arises, namely what is real use and what is just occasional record of a word. Unfortunately, from written documents it is not always clear whether a Turkic word was of common use, appeared in literature for fashion, orientalization, an author's own taste, was part of special lexicon, or just a quoted word. In my opinion it is not correct to quote foreign words from modern or 20th-century encyclopedias in a dictionary of loanwords, as Turek does in his dictionary of the Arabic loanwords in Polish, e.g. fikh ‘Muslim canonical jurisprudence’ (Turek 2001: 198). It is absolutely clear that fikh in Turek's dictionary is just a foreign encyclopedic term and not a loanword.
This problem does not only apply to modern or relatively recent documents, but also to former texts. It seems that the criterion of selection of the documents in which we can speak of loanwords is not well defined and consistently used by the researchers.
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- Information
- Words and DictionariesA Festschrift for Professor Stanisław Stachowski on the Occasion of His 85th Birthday, pp. 139 - 148Publisher: Jagiellonian University PressPrint publication year: 2016