- In linguistics, a
neologism (/niˈɒləˌdʒɪzəm/; also
known as a coinage) is any
newly formed word, term, or
phrase that has
achieved po****r or institutional...
-
refers to a po****r
false etymology involving no
neologization, and the GPE
refers to
neologization generated by a po****r
false etymology. Such etymologies...
- the
neologization: guestwords,
foreignisms and
loanwords Borrowing using a
target language lexical items as the
basic material for the
neologization: phono-semantic...
-
refers to a po****r
false etymology involving no
neologization, and the GPE
refers to
neologization generated by a po****r
false etymology.
Examples of...
-
creation and
addition of new
words (into the lexicon) is
called coining or
neologization, and the new
words are
called neologisms. It is
often believed that...
-
false cognates can
sometimes be used in the
creation of new
words (
neologization). For example, the
Hebrew word דַּל dal ("poor") (which is a
false cognate...
- the
widespread phenomena of
camouflaged borrowing and
multisourced neologization and not to
force one
source on multi-parental
lexical items. Zuckermann...
- for Old Persian, Elamite, and Babylonian. Four
authors independently neologized English digraphia from diglossia. The
Songhay linguist Petr Zima (1974)...
- (even
favouring established roots like
Sanskrit and Arabic) as well as
neologizing from
native roots. In
recent years,
Malaysian has also been influenced...
-
shift (revitalization and reinvigoration). His
analysis of
multisourced neologization (the
coinage of
words deriving from two or more
sources at the same...