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The majority of new words in dictionaries are included following a certain period of time during which they have become more frequent in use and established morphosyntactic and orthographic features consistent with the language system they are borrowed into. In case of borrowed new words, inclusion often takes place at a transitional state of assimilation to the language system, where delayed orthographic or phonetic change cannot be ruled out and the differentiation between standard-conforming and non-standard orthographic word forms of a lemma oftentimes depends on the proximity between the writing systems of the donor and the recipient language. Following a brief overview of loan words and their lexicographical description in the Neologismenwörterbuch, a specialized online dictionary for neologisms in contemporary German, this paper presents findings of an investigative case study on dictionary entries for a neologism borrowed from a logographic language system and discusses the potential of a corpus-based description of new loan words.
This paper discusses German neologisms in the so-called “new-media” and presents a German corpus-based online dictionary of neologisms. Several neological morphemes and lexemes, as well as their meaning will be presented, showing that these new modes of communication are an important source of enrichment of German lexicon.
Aversion to loanwords may express itself in various ways: deliberate and motivated by ideology of linguistic purism or more implicit and motivated by the strength of one’s national identification and ethnolinguistic vitality. A study of Polish philology students assessed their tendency to choose loanwords versus synonymous native words. The results supported a two-path model of linguistic purism. Social identity (strength of identification) directly predicted avoidance of loanwords, whereas ideological concerns (conservative political views) predicted it indirectly, through purist ideology.
Eurolatein
(1996)
Mit politischer, wirtschaftlicher und gesellschaftlicher Öffnung im Rahmen von Globalisierung und Internationalisierung gelangen trotz weitreichender Dominanz von Anglizismen verstärkt auch Neologismen aus anderen Sprach- und Kulturräumen in den deutschen Gegenwartswortschatz. Der Beitrag beschreibt, wie sich diese Neuentlehnungen - Italianismen und neue Fremdwörter aus anderen europäischen und außereuropäischen Sprachen - orthografisch entwickeln und wie sie sich zu den amtlichen Regeln der deutschen Rechtschreibung verhalten. Auf der Grundlage großer digitaler Textkorpora wird der Schreibusus professioneller und informeller Schriftlichkeit analysiert - mit dem Ziel einheitlicher Kodifizierung und Integration in das Regelsystem der deutschen Orthografie.
In the lexicon of pidgin and creole languages we can see an important part of these languages’ history of origin and of language contact. The current paper deals with the lexical sources of Tok Pisin and, more specifically, with words of German origin found in this language. During the period of German colonial domination of New Guinea and a number of insular territories in the Pacific (ca. 1885–1915), German words entered the emerging Tok Pisin lexicon. Based on a broad range of lexical and lexicographic data from the early 20th century up until today, we investigate the actual or presumed German origin of a number of Tok Pisin words and trace different lexical processes of integration that are linked to various, often though not always colonially determined, contact settings and sociocultural interactions.