-
Reborrowing is the
process where a word
travels from one
language to
another and then back to the
originating language in a
different form or with a different...
- twist, turn,', from
Latin tornō 'to turn'). The
English word has been
reborrowed into Spanish,
referring to the same
weather phenomenon. Tornadoes' opposite...
-
words inherited from
Magadhi Prakrit and Pali,
along with
tatsamas and
reborrowings from
Sanskrit and
borrowings from Persian, Arabic,
Austroasiatic languages...
-
Irish as
craic in the mid-20th
century and the
Irish spelling was then
reborrowed into English.
Under both spellings, the term has
become po****r and significant...
-
which comes directly from
Egyptian wḥꜣt or
Demotic wḥj. However,
Coptic reborrowed some
words of
Ancient Egyptian origin into its lexicon, via Gr****. For...
-
would have been
short rather than long. Some
gairaigo words have been
reborrowed into
their original source languages,
particularly in the
jargon of fans...
-
developed into the
Middle English letter yogh (Ȝ ȝ).
Middle English,
having reborrowed the
familiar Carolingian g from the Continent,
began to use the two forms...
-
occasional use of this term in
English can be
considered a
linguistic reborrowing via the
Russian pseudo-anglicism фейсконтроль (feiskontrol). Some establishments...
- for its
textile production [...].
French popeline (1735) is
apparently reborrowed < English." Cave,
Nigel (29
March 1990). "Poperinge (WWI)/Vlamertinge"...
- Mat'jur in the
local dialect, and in
Friulian as Mòntmaiôr or Mataiûr (a
reborrowing from Slovene).
Another old name for this peak is
Velika Baba.[citation...