The universality of kinship terms means they are regarded, like much basic vocabulary, as resistant to borrowing. Kin term borrowings are documented at varying frequencies, but their role in the dynamics of change in this core social domain is understudied. We investigated the dimensions and the sociolinguistic contexts of kinship borrowings with 50 kinship categories from a global sample of 32 languages, a subset extracted from the World Loanword Database. We found that more borrowings take place in affinal kin categories and in generations denoting relatives older than ego. Close kin categories also have borrowings, but the borrowed items usually coexist with other, presumably non-borrowed variants. Colonisation and the spread of cultures...
This article argues that kinship terminologies are best studied in their full linguistic context; th...
This research was funded by the European Research Council's Horizon 2020 programme under Starting Gr...
<p>Some words for family members do not change much. European words for ‘mother,’ ‘father,’ ‘brother...
The universality of kinship terms means they are regarded, like much basic vocabulary, as resistant ...
Kinship terms are assumed to be universal and central to social life, and consequently they are not ...
Kinship terminologies express how societies encode familial relationships in language. While words s...
Kinship terminology is a human universal, a kind of cultural knowledge circulated through language. ...
For a single species, human kinship organization is both remarkably diverse and strikingly organized...
All languages borrow words from other languages. Some languages are more prone to borrowing, while o...
Abstract: Research in anthropology has shown that kin terminologies have a complex combinatorial str...
All languages borrow words from other languages. Some languages are more prone to borrowing, while o...
This chapter compares kinship terminologies and kinship practices in eight Alor-Pantar languages for...
This handbook article gives an overview of the ways in which borrowing has been studied in different...
Turkic kinship terminologies represent a mixture of words of native and foreign origin, and the prop...
Kinship has been an “essentially contested concept” in social and cultural anthropology. Neverthele...
This article argues that kinship terminologies are best studied in their full linguistic context; th...
This research was funded by the European Research Council's Horizon 2020 programme under Starting Gr...
<p>Some words for family members do not change much. European words for ‘mother,’ ‘father,’ ‘brother...
The universality of kinship terms means they are regarded, like much basic vocabulary, as resistant ...
Kinship terms are assumed to be universal and central to social life, and consequently they are not ...
Kinship terminologies express how societies encode familial relationships in language. While words s...
Kinship terminology is a human universal, a kind of cultural knowledge circulated through language. ...
For a single species, human kinship organization is both remarkably diverse and strikingly organized...
All languages borrow words from other languages. Some languages are more prone to borrowing, while o...
Abstract: Research in anthropology has shown that kin terminologies have a complex combinatorial str...
All languages borrow words from other languages. Some languages are more prone to borrowing, while o...
This chapter compares kinship terminologies and kinship practices in eight Alor-Pantar languages for...
This handbook article gives an overview of the ways in which borrowing has been studied in different...
Turkic kinship terminologies represent a mixture of words of native and foreign origin, and the prop...
Kinship has been an “essentially contested concept” in social and cultural anthropology. Neverthele...
This article argues that kinship terminologies are best studied in their full linguistic context; th...
This research was funded by the European Research Council's Horizon 2020 programme under Starting Gr...
<p>Some words for family members do not change much. European words for ‘mother,’ ‘father,’ ‘brother...