Neologism construction in Amharic by compounding various parts of speech

The Amharic language is the second most widely spoken Semitic language in the world, used by around 25 million speakers. Even though the Amharic language is successfully used in many domains, it still needs appropriate neologisms to give name to notions typical for Western European culture which inc...

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Main Author: Michał Kozicki
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Warsaw University Press 2017-12-01
Series:Studies in African Languages and Cultures
Online Access:https://salc.uw.edu.pl/index.php/SALC/article/view/213
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spelling doaj-55f494c122af4458a757b4a6b1f16ff62020-11-25T02:49:28ZdeuWarsaw University PressStudies in African Languages and Cultures2545-21342657-41872017-12-01515368151Neologism construction in Amharic by compounding various parts of speechMichał Kozicki0Adam Mickiewicz UniversityThe Amharic language is the second most widely spoken Semitic language in the world, used by around 25 million speakers. Even though the Amharic language is successfully used in many domains, it still needs appropriate neologisms to give name to notions typical for Western European culture which increasingly influences not only the language but also the culture of Ethiopia. Even though loanwords from European languages were ubiquitous in Amharic for many decades, in recent years the lexicon of the extinct Geʿez language is partially used to coin a number of neologisms by means of metaphors or different juxtaposed parts of speech. In the beginning, the compounds in the form of the Amharic and Geʿez construct state (status constructus) are discussed; this is followed by an analysis of adjective-noun compounds, constructions with the nouns derived from verbs and verb and noun compounds. In the next part of the article the compounds with Geʿez prefixes are considered. The analysis of hybridised compounds and loan translations is the final point of the paper.https://salc.uw.edu.pl/index.php/SALC/article/view/213
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michał Kozicki
spellingShingle Michał Kozicki
Neologism construction in Amharic by compounding various parts of speech
Studies in African Languages and Cultures
author_facet Michał Kozicki
author_sort Michał Kozicki
title Neologism construction in Amharic by compounding various parts of speech
title_short Neologism construction in Amharic by compounding various parts of speech
title_full Neologism construction in Amharic by compounding various parts of speech
title_fullStr Neologism construction in Amharic by compounding various parts of speech
title_full_unstemmed Neologism construction in Amharic by compounding various parts of speech
title_sort neologism construction in amharic by compounding various parts of speech
publisher Warsaw University Press
series Studies in African Languages and Cultures
issn 2545-2134
2657-4187
publishDate 2017-12-01
description The Amharic language is the second most widely spoken Semitic language in the world, used by around 25 million speakers. Even though the Amharic language is successfully used in many domains, it still needs appropriate neologisms to give name to notions typical for Western European culture which increasingly influences not only the language but also the culture of Ethiopia. Even though loanwords from European languages were ubiquitous in Amharic for many decades, in recent years the lexicon of the extinct Geʿez language is partially used to coin a number of neologisms by means of metaphors or different juxtaposed parts of speech. In the beginning, the compounds in the form of the Amharic and Geʿez construct state (status constructus) are discussed; this is followed by an analysis of adjective-noun compounds, constructions with the nouns derived from verbs and verb and noun compounds. In the next part of the article the compounds with Geʿez prefixes are considered. The analysis of hybridised compounds and loan translations is the final point of the paper.
url https://salc.uw.edu.pl/index.php/SALC/article/view/213
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