151 research outputs found

    LEI - Lessico Etimologico Italiano - Germanismi -

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    The issue, after a short introduction on the structure of the articles and organisation of lexical materials, presents all Gmc. etyma with initial letter A- and discusses etyma beginning with B-/P-; the last article, Old Franc. ban is completed in the following issue

    LEI - Lessico Etimologico Italiano - Germanismi

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    The editor is author of several articles. In this issue further words of Germanic origin are considered: Gmc. *blanka- (col. 932 onwards in the 5th issue) is completed. Particularly interesting is the discussion of Goth. *blauþs- Lomb. *blutt- coll. 1072-1074 and Lomb. *blaut(t)-/*blaus(s)- coll. 1059-1071, whose realisations in the Italian varieties are interconnected both at phonetic and semantic levels: they offer the opportunity for commenting on the distinction of single Germanic (super)strata. For It. plovo, a word whose etymology is controversial, Lomb. *plō(g)- is proposed. The final column (col. 1140) of this issue offers the contents of Gmc.*ƀorđa-, published in the following issue (nr. 7, in 2011). Taken together the articles discussed in issue nr.6 give an overview of several typologies of borrowings from the Germanic languages, showing the complexity of the contact between Germanic and Italoromance: (i) words from Old Franconian, such as *plegan, *blettian, blok, bolla (indirect borrowings through Medieval Lat. plebium / plevium; Old French blecier, French bloc, Medieval Lat. Bolengarius, respectively); (ii) words from Swiss German (Blass, Blatere, blind, Blutzger), from Tyrolese (plindεrn, plumpf) or from Modern German (Blatt, Plunder, Bocksbart, Polier, Polizei); (iii) words from Dutch (Middle Du. bolwerc, pompelmoes)

    LEI - Lessico Etimologico Italiano - Germanismi

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    In this issue the article Lomb. *panc is completed; last article of the 3th issue is Old Franc. *banstu

    LEI - Lessico Etimologico Italiano - Germanismi

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    In this issue further words of Germanic origin are considered, from Germ. pantschen to Old Franc. *bihordon (completed in the 5th issue)
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