Spracherneuerungen in Mitteleuropa im 19. Jahrhundert - Versuch der Herausbildung muttersprachlicher Terminologien in den mitteleuropäischen Sprachen
Language Renewals in Central Europe in the 19th Century - An attempt to develop native terminologies in the Central European languages
Author(s): István NyomárkaySubject(s): Language studies, Lexis, Sociolinguistics, Finno-Ugrian studies, Western Slavic Languages, South Slavic Languages, 19th Century, Politics and Identity
Published by: Akadémiai Kiadó
Keywords: Hungarian Czech and Croatian neologist movement; terminology; language reform; loanwords;
Summary/Abstract: In Central and Southern Europe, conscious and planned language reform movements started to unfold in the late 18th century, culminating in the middle of the 19th century. The emergence of specialized terminologies of Czech, Hungarian, and Croatian (as well as, to some extent, of Serbian) shows a number of similarities. Their mental roots can be found in the ideas of the enlightenment. Their fundamental aim was to express, in the respective mother tongues, the new terms of civilization in the broadest sense. That aim was served by the language reform movements whose earliest significant results were embodied in German-based terminological dictionaries of the various Slavonic languages published in the mid-19th century. This paper deals with the reasons, antecedents, and results of those movements.
Journal: Studia Slavica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae
- Issue Year: 53/2008
- Issue No: 2
- Page Range: 425-440
- Page Count: 16
- Language: German
- Content File-PDF