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ASSIMILATION OF LOAN WORDS

The role of loan words in the formation and development of English vocabulary is dealt with in the history of the language. It is there that the historical circumstances are discussed under which words borrowed from Latin, from Scandinavian dialects, from Norman and Parisian French and many other languages, including Russian, were introduced into English. Lexicology, on the other hand, has in this connection tasks of its own, being chiefly concerned with the material and the results of assimilation.

The main problems of etymology and borrowed words as they concern the English language are comprehensively and consistently treated in Professor A.I. Smirnitsky’s book on lexicology. Professor A.I. Smirnitsky deals with these issues mainly in terms of word sameness reflecting his methodological approach to word theory.

In the present paragraph attention must be concentrated on the assimilation of loan words as a way of their interaction with the system of the language as a whole. The term assimilation of a loan word is used to denote a partial or total conformation to the phonetical, graphical and morphological standards of the receiving language and its semantic system. The degree of assimilation depends upon the length of period during which the word has been used in the receiving language, upon its importance for communication purpose and its frequency. Oral borrowings due to personal contacts are assimilated more completely and more rapidly than literary borrowings, i.e. borrowings through written speech.


A classification of loan words according to the degree of assimilation can be only very general as no rigorous procedure for measuring it has so far been developed. The following three groups may be suggested: completely assimilated loan words, partially assimilated loan words and unassimilated loan words or barbarisms. The group of partially assimilated words may be subdivided depending on the aspect that remains unaltered, i.e. according to whether the word retains features of spelling, pronunciation, morphology or denotation (when the word denotes some specific realia) that are not English. The third group is not universally accepted, as it may be argued that words not changed at all cannot form part of the English vocabulary, because they occur in speech only, but do not enter the language.

I. Completely assimilated loan words are found in all the layers of older borrowings. They may belong to the first layer of Latin borrowings, e.g. cheese, street, wall or wine. Among Scandinavian loan words we find such frequent nouns as husband, fellow, gate, root, wing; such verbs as call, die, take, want and adjectives like happy, ill, low, odd and wrong. Completely assimilated French words are extremely numerous and frequent. Suffice it to mention such everyday words as table and chair, face and figure, finish and matter. A considerable number of Latin words borrowed during the revival of learning are at present almost indistinguishable from the rest of the vocabulary. Neither animal nor article differ noticeably from native words. The number of completely assimilated loan words is many times greater than the number of partially assimilated ones. They follow all morphological, phonetical and orthographic standards. Being very frequent and stylistically neutral, they may occur as dominant words in synonymic groups. They take an active part in word-formation. Moreover, their morphological structure and motivation remain transparent, so that they are morphologically analysable and therefore supply the English vocabulary not only with free forms but also with bound forms, as affixes are easily perceived and separated in series of loan words that contain them. Such are, for instance, the French suffixes -age, -ance and -ment, and the English modification of French -esse and -fier, which provide speech material to produce hybrids like shortage, goddess, hindrance, speechify, and endearment. The free forms, on the other hand, are readily combined with native affixes, e.g. pained, painful, painfully, painless, painlessness, all formed from pain<Fr peine<Lat poena >Gr poine ‘penalty’. The subject of hybrids has already been dealt with in the chapter on derivation (see p.p. 106-107).



Completely assimilated loan words are also indistinguishable phonetically. It is impossible to say judging by the sound of the words sport and start whether they are borrowed or native. In fact start is native, derived from ME sterten, whereas sport is a shortening of disport vt<OFr (se) desporter ‘to amuse oneself, ‘to carry oneself away from one’s work’ (ultimately derived from Lat portare ‘to carry’). This last example brings us to the problem of semantic assimilation. This problem deserves far more attention than has hitherto been given to it. Its treatment has been


limited so far to passing remarks in works dealing with other subjects. The first thing that needs stressing is that a loan word never brings into the receiving language the whole of its semantic structure if it is polysemantic in the original language. And even the borrowed variants are for the most part changed and specialized in the new system.

The word sport can serve as an illustration. It had a much wider scope in Old French denoting pleasures, making merry and entertainments in general. It was borrowed into Middle English in this character but gradually acquired the additional meaning of outdoor games and exercise, and in this new meaning was borrowed into many European languages and became international. This process of semantic specialization in borrowing is even more evident in such loan words from Russian as Soviet and sputnik, whose Russian prototypes are polysemantic. In the light of current ideas, it is convenient to classify and study loan words as oppositions of the words as they exist in the receiving language with their prototypes in the source language, on the one hand, and with words of the same lexico-grammatical class or (depending on the level chosen) of the same morphological or phonetical pattern in the receiving language.

Specialization is primarily due to the fact that the receiving system has at its disposal words for the older notions, and it is only the new notion that needs a new name. Even so, the borrowing of a new word leads as a rule to semantic changes in words already existing in the language. The interaction of linguistic and extralinguistic, i.e. political, economical and cultural, factors in this process has been investigated by several authors (I.P. Ivanova, N.I. Eremeyeva, A.A. Ufimtseva and others). The following example may serve to illustrate these relationships.

OE burh/burg from beorgan ‘to protect’ meant ‘a fortress, a castle, a walled town’. In the 11th century when the Normans brought the word castel, a diminutive from Lat castra, this loan word came to denote the type of fortified mansion in which the Norman feudal aristocracy lived. So the native word burh/burg lost its first meanings keeping only the last: ‘a fortified, walled town’. In the 15th century the change of the economical and political status of towns causes the word burg to lose its meaning of a fortified place. The modern word borough denotes a town with a corporation and special privileges granted by a royal charter, also a town that sends its representatives to parliament.

The conformity of the completely assimilated loan words to morphological patterns of the English paradigms may be illustrated by Scandinavian loans taking the plural ending -s: eggs, gates, laws; or Latin loan verbs with the dental suffix of the Past Indefinite and Participle II: acted, corrected, disturbed.

To illustrate the frequency of completely assimilated words it is sufficient to mention that many of them are included by E.L. Thorn-dike and I. Lorge in the list of 500 most frequent words. Some of these are: act (Lat), age (Fr), army (Fr), bill (Lat), case (Fr), cast (ON), cause (Fr) die (Scand). II. The second group containing partially assimilated


loan words can be subdivided into subgroups. The oppositions are equipollent.

(a) Loan words not assimilated semantically, because they denote objects and notions peculiar to the country from which they come. They may denote foreign clothing: mantilla, sombrero; foreign titles and professions: shah, rajah, sheik, bei, toreador; foreign vehicles: caique (Turkish), rickshaw (Chinese); food and drinks: pilaw (Persian), sherbet (Arabian); foreign currency: krone (Denmark), rupee (India), zloty (Poland), peseta (Spain), rouble (USSR), etc.

(b) Loan words not assimilated grammatically, for example, nouns borrowed from Latin or Greek which keep their original plural forms: bacillus : : bacilli; crisis : : crises; formula : : formulae; index : : indices; phenomenon : : phenomena. Some of these are also used in English plural forms, but in that case there may be a difference in lexical meaning, as in indices : : indexes.

(c) Loan words not completely assimilated phonetically. The French words borrowed after 1650 afford good examples. Some of them keep the accent on the final syllable: machine, cartoon, police. Others, along side with peculiarities in stress, contain sounds or combinations of sounds that are not standard for the English language and do not occur in native words. The examples are: [ç] — bourgeois, camouflage, prestige, regime, sabotage; [wa: ] — as in memoir, or the nasalized [a], [î] — melange. In many cases it is not the sounds but the whole pattern of the word’s phonetic make-up that is different from the rest of the vocabulary, as in some of the Italian and Spanish borrowings: confetti, incognito, macaroni, opera, sonata, soprano and tomato, potato, tobacco.

The pronunciation of words where the process of assimilation is phonetically incomplete will often vary, as in [’foiei ] or [’fwaje] for foyer and [’bu:lva:]( [’bu:hva: ], [’bu:leva:], [’bu:lva:d] for boulevard. Eight different pronunciations are registered by D. Jones for the word fiancé.1

(d) Loan words not completely assimilated graphically. This group, as V.I. Balinskaya shows’, is fairly large and variegated. There are, for instance, words borrowed from French in which the final consonant is riot pronounced, e.g. ballet, buffet, corps. Some may keep a diacritic mark: café, cliché. Specifically French digraphs (ch, qu, ou, etc.) may be retained in spelling: bouquet, brioche. Some have variant spellings.

It goes without saying that these sets are intersecting, i.e. one and the same loan word often shows incomplete assimilation in several respects simultaneously.

III The third group of borrowings comprises the so-called b a r b a r-i s m s; i.e. words from other languages used by English people in conversation or in writing but not assimilated in any way, and for which there are corresponding English equivalents. The examples are the Italian addio, ciao ‘good-bye’, the French affiche for ‘placard’ and coup or coup d’Etat ‘a sudden seizure of state power by a small group’, the Latin ad libitum ‘at pleasure’ and the like.

1 "The Concise English Dictionary" contains a specific appendix of non-English words indicating their anglicized and foreign pronunciation.

258


The incompleteness of assimilation results in some specific features which permit us to judge of the origin of words. They may serve as formal indications of loan words of Greek, Latin, French or other origin.


Date: 2016-01-03; view: 2702


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