Diachronic Semantic Changes of French Borrowed Vocabulary in the Russian Language

被引:0
|
作者
Andrianova, Natalia S. [1 ]
Ostroumova, Olga F. [1 ]
Mingazova, Raushaniya R. [1 ]
Vanchikova, Elena A. [2 ]
机构
[1] Kazan Fed Univ, Kazan, Russia
[2] NA Dobrolyubov Nizhny Novgorod State Linguist Uni, Nizhnii Novgorod, Russia
关键词
Archaization; Historization; Secondary Borrowing; Gallicism;
D O I
10.22055/RALS.2019.15152
中图分类号
H0 [语言学];
学科分类号
030303 ; 0501 ; 050102 ;
摘要
An integrated approach to describing the adaptation of borrowed vocabulary from the initial stage of its functioning in the receiving language to its complete assimilation by the receptor language is one of the key stages in the analysis of diachronic changes in the lexical system of the language. The main method of such a study is the diachronous descriptive method, which allows us to trace the evolution of a borrowed lexical unit on different synchronous sections of the receptor language and the donor language. This article is devoted to the analysis of the process of semantic adaptation of foreign language lexical units in the lexical system of the Russian language. The object of the study is borrowings of French origin that were part of the Russian language from the 18th to the 20th centuries. The semantic mastery of gallicisms by the host language is considered in the aspect of the diachronous process of semantic archaization and innovation. The semantic development of borrowing within the framework of the dynamic processes of the lexical system of the Russian language leads to archaization, historicization, actualization of the meanings of borrowing, as well as to the emergence of innovations (new meanings) and homonyms in the borrowed term on the basis of the receptor language. These changes indicate the activity of the following processes in the lexical system of the Russian language: semantic archaization, derivation and secondary borrowing on the basis of the host language, the conversion of polysemant borrowing into homonyms.
引用
收藏
页码:809 / 816
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Reciprocity as a functional semantic field in the Russian language
    Palosi Ildiko
    BEITRAGE ZUM 19. ARBEITSTREFFEN DER EUROPAISCHEN SLAVISTISCHEN LINGUISTIK (POLYSLAV), 2016, 60 : 208 - 217
  • [42] Semantic shifts of lexical borrowings in the Russian language
    Nagel, Olga V.
    Volkova, Marina V.
    YAZYK I KULTURA-LANGUAGE AND CULTURE, 2023, (64): : 8 - 27
  • [43] Semantic mapping of the Russian language in the human brain
    Ushakov, Vadim L.
    Orlov, Vyacheslav A.
    Kartashov, Sergey I.
    Malakhov, Denis G.
    Korosteleva, Anastasia N.
    Skiteva, Lyudmila I.
    Zaidelman, Lyudmila Ya.
    Zinina, Anna A.
    Kotov, Artemy A.
    Velichkovsky, Boris M.
    Zabotkina, Vera I.
    POSTPROCEEDINGS OF THE 9TH ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON BIOLOGICALLY INSPIRED COGNITIVE ARCHITECTURES (BICA 2018), 2018, 145 : 590 - 595
  • [44] The Semantic Evolution of the Adverb absoljutno in the Russian Language
    Nikolaeva, Julia
    STUDI SLAVISTICI, 2020, 17 (02) : 199 - 211
  • [46] Semantic transfer and its implications for vocabulary teaching in a second language
    Jiang, N
    MODERN LANGUAGE JOURNAL, 2004, 88 (03): : 416 - 432
  • [47] When old French helps in teaching French language. From the interest of a diachronic perspective in the teaching of language
    Longhi, Blandine
    PERSPECTIVES MEDIEVALES-REVUE D'EPISTEMOLOGIE DES LANGUES ET LITTERATURES DU MOYEN AGE, 2018, (39):
  • [48] CURRENT SEMANTIC DEVELOPMENTS OF RUSSIAN VOCABULARY (A STUDY BASED ON NEWSPAPER MATERIAL) - RUSSIAN - FERM,L
    KURASHOVA, N
    SLAVONIC AND EAST EUROPEAN REVIEW, 1996, 74 (03): : 485 - 487
  • [49] SOME DEBATES OVER THE ROLE OF SPOKEN LANGUAGE IN THE DIACHRONIC EVOLUTION OF THE FRENCH-LANGUAGE
    BLANCHEBENVENISTE, C
    LANGUE FRANCAISE, 1995, (107): : 25 - 35
  • [50] Testing of statistical significance of semantic changes detected by diachronic word embedding
    Bochkarev, Vladimir V.
    Maslennikova, Yulia S.
    Shevlyakova, Anna, V
    JOURNAL OF INTELLIGENT & FUZZY SYSTEMS, 2022, 43 (06) : 6965 - 6977