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German "-isch" and English "-ish" share a common Germanic origin, which is evidenced by striking similarities concerning the derivation of ethnic adjectives "(englisch/English)" or property-denoting adjectives "(kindisch/childish)". However, after an initial period of parallel characteristics, the two languages display drastic changes, with English developing an approximative sense when attached to adjectival bases (e.g. "greenish") and expanding to a wide range of other word categories, while German "-isch" develops multiple functions and also comes to firmly occupy a morphological niche with non-native bases. The paper sheds light on the evolving divergence between German and English by presenting results from two diachronic corpus-based studies. Additionally, explanations with respect to the typological parameter of 'Boundary Permeability' are provided.
This paper investigates the spelling of compound nouns in a corpus comprised of Early New High German protocols of witch trials from the 16th and 17th century. Previous studies on the spelling of compound nouns in printed texts have found that scribes increasingly write compound nouns as one word during the 16th century. However, this paper will show that there is still much variation in handwritten texts from that time. The study focusses on identifying factors that lead scribes to write compound nouns either as one word or two, such as linking elements and the use of upper case letters. I will argue that while there is more variation in the spelling of compound nouns in the handwritten corpus than in printed texts, there still is a strong tendency to line up the boundaries of the graphemic and syntactic words.
An inventory of the Middle High German word families is still missing wheras the Old High German and New High German word families are recorded by the dictionaries of J. Splett. In this paper a semi-automatic method is represented which can help to find and analyze the Middle High German word families. By several scripts a combined list of MHG and OHG lemmata is tranformed and expanded to a table containing among other things a column with a simplified variation of Splett's word formation formulas and a column with the common base of the word family the lemma probably belongs to. In a labour-intensive last step, these proposals have to be manually checked and corrected.
In German, non-finite forms of verbs that are traditionally labelled as "nominalized infinitives", but are better categorized as gerunds, can show very unusual features. Although they carry a definitive article and therefore clearly seem to belong to the class of nouns, they still govern objects and adverbials in exactly the same way the verb does. It is therefore argued that in spite of the determiners, these forms are essentially verbal in nature. The syntactic functions they fulfil can be anything from subject or object to adverbial or attributive modifier, i. e. functions that are usually fulfilled by subordinate clauses. Since this is the same kind of behavior that converbs in languages like Turkish show, this leads to the suggestion that they can indeed be considered as a functionally similar to converbs.
The article delineates the development of nominal synthetic compounding in the history of German. In particular, it is attested an enhancement of the morphological structure which correlates with a morphological intersection of determinative compounding happening from Early New High German onwards.
This article deals with the development of -igen verbs in German since the Old High German period, demonstrating that this can be regarded as a process in which the adjective formation morpheme -ig gradually develops into a component of a word formation pattern that derives transitive verbs from nouns. An -igen-verb can be descended not only from an -ig-adjective (würdig – würdigen) but also from a noun without an intermediary -ig-adjective (Pein – *peinig – peinigen). In this article, it is claimed that a word formation pattern with -ig develops over time. The emergence of this word formation pattern can be described as a "reanalysis" of the verb structure accompanied by a "resegmentation" of the original word structure and a semantic "remotivation" of the established unit. It is also pointed out that this development is particularly evident in the Middle High German period.
Am 31. März 2017 und 01. April 2017 fand in Lyon unter Federführung des Forschungszentrums Centre d'Etudes Linguistiques (CEL – EA 1663) und unter Beteiligung des Labors Interactions, Corpus, Apprentissages, Représentations (ICAR – UMR 5191) der Universitäten Lumière Lyon 2 und der Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon ein internationaler Kongress zu Formen, Verfahren und Funktionen der Bildung lexematischer und polylexematischer Einheiten im Deutschen (Formation et préformation lexicale de l'allemand) statt. GermanistInnen aus Deutschland, Frankreich, Polen, Russland und Spanien nahmen an diesem Symposium teil.
Morphology Days is a (nearly) biennial international meeting which deals with morphology within different frameworks and in various perspectives Previous editions of this conference have taken place in Leuven (2015), Leeuwarden (2013), Leiden (2012), Nijmegen (2011), Luik (2009) and Amsterdam (2007) While the first editions of the conference were mainly addressed to researchers working on morphology in the Netherlands and in Belgium, the last editions – including this one – included international contributions The programme and the book of abstract is available at the conference’s homepage at https://morphologydays2017.wordpress.com/program/. Organized by Philippe Hiligsmann, Kristel Van Goethem, Nikos Koutsoukos and Isa Hendrikx from the Université Catholique de Louvain, and Laurent Raiser from the Université de Liège, this edition of Morphology Days hosted more than 30 researchers, among which 3 plenary speakers, coming not only from Belgium but also from France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Spain, the United Kingdom and the United States. Although both inflection and derivation (affixation) where dealt with in the talks, this conference report will only address the studies on derivation.
This paper studies the morphological productivity of German N+N compounding patterns from a diachronic perspective. It argues that the productivity of compounds increases due to syntactic influence from genitive constructions ("improper compounds") in Early New High German. Both quantitative and qualitative productivity measures are adapted from derivational morphology and tested on compound data from the Mainz Corpus of (Early) New High German (1500–1710).
This study aims to present the linguistic landscape of a transylvanian city, namely Mediaș, using the Linguistic Landscape method. It is investigated in which areas of the public space the languages of the historical national minorities are present. The corpus includes inscriptions from the public space that have been analysed and classified according to certain criteria.
In the context of the emergence of various online dictionaries and platforms that also address phraseological units, their usefulness is being questioned and their potential examined in order to illustrate new directions in the development of digital phraseography. The article shows special traits in the formation of lexicographical content in two selected online dictionaries, using the lemma “cat” as example.
The article is devoted to a historical German settlement in present-day Slovakia, since the small German minority of the lumberjacks/woodcutters (Slovak. Huncokári) has received little attention. The urgency of the need for research is also pointed out, since there are only very few speakers of this dialect left. The article therefore informs about some background of the settlement history, the present state and about approaches for ethnological field research.
The article deals with the promotion of the German language abroad through Germany’s foreign cultural and educational policy. An important concern of the German intermediary organizations abroad is access to culture and education across geographic, political and social borders, but scientific and economic policy. interests, which benefit the needs of the German market, also play a major role. Regarding the fact that more and more skilled workers who are ultimately lacking in their countries of origin are migrating to Germany, the article questions whether it is always a so-called triple-win model.
The present article initially covers the meaning of Pomānǝ, a noun loaned from the Romanian language into certain idioms and collocations of the TransylvaninSaxon vernacular. It goes on to cover this loan word‘s constructions documented in the North-Transylvanian craft vocabulary, mainly hybrid formations, including their meaning and their type of word formation. The verb pomenin loaned from the Romanian language into the Transylvanian-Saxon vernacular is presented in its transitive, intransitive as well as reflexive usage in meaningful vernacular records and outlines its morphological integration into the Transylvanin-Saxon language. Both loan words come with etymological explanations. The vernacular records are taken from South Transylvanian and North Transylvanian specialist and vernacular literature as well as from the Transylvanian-Saxon Dictionary.
Inhalt
I. Literaturwissenschaft und Landeskunde
Markus FISCHER (Bukarest):
Blaublütige Dracula-Fantasie mit idyllischer Coda –
Dana Grigorceas dritter Roman Die nicht sterben ……………….….. 15
Grazziella PREDOIU (Temeswar):
Die Essayistik Herta Müllers…………………………………………………….. 34
Claudia SPIRIDON-ȘERBU (Kronstadt):
Herta Müllers fiktionalisierter Raum, mit Karten lesen –
ein Beispiel aus der Praxis………………………………………………….…..….. 50
Andreea DUMITRU (Hermannstadt):
Das Werden eines Schicksals. Die Stadt Klausenburg als Angelpunkt
einer Existenz in Eginald Schlattners Roman Wasserzeichen .…….70
Roxana NUBERT/ Ana-Maria DASCĂLU-ROMIȚAN (Temeswar):
Der Schriftsteller Franz Xaver Kappus als Vertreter der literarischen
Moderne im Banat…………………………………………………………………….… 84
Sunhild GALTER (Hermannstadt/Sibiu):
Maria Haydls Dichtung als Erinnerungsort siebenbürgisch-sächsischer Kultur? ……………………………………………………………………………..114
Lăcrămioara-Marilena POPA (Hermannstadt/Sibiu):
Das Türkenbüchlein des Ungenannten Mühlbächers – ein
vergessener Bestseller des Mittelalters – heute wieder aktuell? 126
Marius-Daniel STROIA (Hermannstadt/Sibiu):
Schuld und Erlösung in Traugott Teutschs Erzählung
„Der Wortmann“……………..…………………………………………………… 136
Ioana CRĂCIUN-FISCHER (Bukarest):
“Aus jeder Schwäche schmiede ich ein Schwert.” Jüdische Identität und weibliches Selbstbewusstsein in Klara blums Lyrik ………..155
Elẑbieta NOWIKIEWICZ (Polen):
Amerikabild (er) des Reiseberichterstatters und Reiseschriftstellers
A.E. Johann …………………………….……………………………………………… 172
Ana KARLSTEDT (Bukarest):
Fremdheitskonstruktionen in Karin Gündischs Roman COSMIN.
Von einem der auszog, das Leben zu lernen……………………………..193
Teodora ȚUGUI-CARABA (Hermannstadt/Sibiu):
Die mythische Erzählwelt des Wassertales nach Anton Joseph-Ilk: phantastische Gestalten und ihre Symolik………………………………….208
II. Sprach- und Übersetzungswissenschaft
Doris SAVA (Hermannstadt/Sibiu):
Nix für die Katz: Laienlexikografie………………………..……….…… 225
Sigrid HALDENWANG (Hermannstadt/Sibiu):
Das Substantiv Pomānǝ,die damit belegten Wortbildungskonstruktionen und das Verb pomenin in den siebenbürgisch-
sächsischen Mundarten …………………………………………………..…. 243
Ellen TICHY (Prishtina/ Berlin)/Blerta ISMAJLI (Prishtina):
Förderung der deutschen Sprache durch die Auswärtige Kultur-
und Bildungspolitik Deutschland: ein Triple-Win-Modell?….258
Ioana CONSTANTIN (Hermannstadt/Sibiu):
Übersetzen zwischen Kompetenz and Identität ………………. 278
Georg SCHUPPENER (Ústí nad Labem):
Sprache und Kultur der deutschen Holzfäller in den Kleinen
Karpaten…………………………………………………………………….…….. 293
Adeline-Alexandra BERDIE (Hermannstadt/Sibiu):
Mehrsprachigkeit in Mediasch. Ein Beitrag zur Linguistik
Landscape..…..……………………………………………………………………. 305
III. Bücherschau
Maria SASS (Hermannstadt/Sibiu):
Zum mittelalterlichen Dichter und Philosophen Dante
Aligheri (1265-1321)…..……………………………………………..…….… 315
Maria SASS (Hermannstadt/Sibiu):
Rezension…………………………….……………………………………………… 322
Attributive participle constructions in German behave like adjectives in terms of inflection and position, but keep their verbal arguments. They can be extended by adjuncts or arguments and these extended attributive present participles mainly occur in written language (Weber, 1994). As the same content can also be expressed in a relative clause (RC), I compare both constructions in order to find out under which conditions a participle construction could lead to processing difficulties and how this relates to RC processing.
Based on previous assumptions for production (e.g. Weber, 1971; Fabricius-Hansen, 2016), three potential factors on the comprehension of prenominal modifiers and RCs are investigated: modifier length, the internal structure and multiple levels of embedding. The hypotheses for an effect on modifier length are mainly based on two processing accounts that make opposite predictions under specific circumstances: memory-based accounts such as the dependency locality theory (DLT) (e.g. Gibson, 2000) and expectation-based accounts such as surprisal (e.g. Levy, 2008). An increase in modifier length results in more intervening material between determiner and noun for the participle construction, contrary to RCs where these elements are adjacent. This separation of the DP could increase memory load. Therefore, longer participles would slow down processing of the noun, while there should be no difference for RCs. Two acceptability judgment experiments showed a tendency for longer participle phrases to receive lower ratings. The modifier length was further investigated in online processing. Contrary to the predicted locality effect, self-paced reading data reveals an anti-locality effect for participle phrases, with lower RTs on the noun when additional material was present inside the modifier. This experiment was followed up by an eye-tracking experiment which replicated the anti-locality effect, but at the participle instead at the noun.
The second factor that was investigated is the argument structure of the participle (or RC verb). My hypothesis is that more “prototypical” adjectives in terms of syntactic structure and semantics are more acceptable and easier to process. Attributive participles are considered hybrids between verbs and adjectives (e.g. Fuhrhop & Teuber, 2000; L¨ubbe & Rapp, 2011) due to their modifier internal verbal function, but adjectival position and agreement with the noun. This double role could lead to difficulties, in particular with a more complex verbal structure. Therefore, the prediction was that the presence of an accusative object inside a participle phrase would lead to lower acceptability ratings and higher reading times in online processing. In the first two acceptability experiments, this prediction was borne out. In addition, an SPR experiment was conducted which manipulated the presence of either an accusative object or adjunct for participles (of verbs that could be used intransitively and transitively) and the corresponding RCs. The experiment showed an effect of the presence of an accusative object on the participle, with higher reading times if an object was present, compared to an adjunct. No such difference was found for the RC verb, which indicates that only participles are processed more slowly when there is an accusative object. An alternative explanation for this finding is the inherent imperfective aspect of the present participle: a direct object could change the event structure in such a way that the aspect no longer matches.
The third factor I investigate is an effect of double embedding on the acceptability of participle phrases and RCs. While double embedded participles are rated lower than double embedded RCs, there is a smaller decrease from single to double embedding for participles than for RCs, contrary to the predictions calculated by the metric of the DLT.
Overall, the results provide evidence for experience-based processing, but they cannot be explained by either memory- or experience-based accounts alone. The effect concerning the presence of an accusative object suggest that properties of the participle distinguish the construction from RCs and affect its processing. The thesis suggests that the latter effect needs to be investigated further in future research. Furthermore, the findings have implications for the role of attributive present participles in German and for hypotheses about similar constructions in other languages.
Wende
(2020)
Wer heute bezogen auf die deutsche Geschichte von 'der Wende' spricht, meint die im Herbst 1989 in der DDR beginnenden und mit deren Anschluss an die Bundesrepublik endenden politischen Umwälzungen. Zwar favorisieren damalige Akteure und manche Historiker dafür pathetischere Bezeichnungen wie 'Freiheitsrevolution' oder das vom damaligen Westberliner Bürgermeister Walter Momper am Tage nach der Maueröffnung geprägte, etwas sperrige Oxymoron 'friedliche Revolution'. Doch gerade die ostdeutsche Alltagssprache hat diese nie übernommen, vielleicht, weil im DDR-Sprachgebrauch 'Revolution' mit sozialem Fortschritt, mit etwas grundsätzlich Neuem verbunden war. Dass 'Wende' zur nahezu neutralen Bezeichnung dieser Prozesse werden würde, war zeitgenössisch keineswegs absehbar.
Unterm Rettungsschirm
(2018)
Macht sich die Zweideutigkeit des "Rettungsschirms" im Deutschen vor allem in Gestalt seiner visuellen und metaphorischen Figurationen bemerkbar, fällt sie im Englischen schon auf wörtlicher Ebene auf. Denn das Englische kennt zwei unterschiedliche Worte für die benannte Sache, sodass der Schirm entweder als 'umbrella' ("Regenschirm") oder als 'parachute' ("Fallschirm") auftreten muss. So finden sich denn auch beide Varianten in der englischsprachigen Berichterstattung über die Eurokrise. Die entsprechenden Formulierungen 'rescue umbrella' oder 'rescue parachute' lassen sich dabei in der Regel als Übersetzungsversuche aus dem Deutschen erkennen. Darüber hinaus finden sich beide Varianten häufig in englischsprachigen Einlassungen deutscher Krisenkommentatoren, die für diese Einrichtung werben oder sie kritisieren wollen. Viele englischsprachige Fachpublikationen, in denen explizit von 'rescue umbrella/parachute' die Rede ist, stammen auch aus der Feder deutscher Autorinnen und Autoren. Dieser Befund lässt die Vermutung zu, dass es sich bei dem Rettungsschirm um eine genuin deutsche Wortschöpfung handeln könnte. Die Vermutung lässt sich durch eine Reihe sprachwissenschaftlicher Untersuchungen bestätigen, die sich mit der Metaphorik der Finanzkrise beschäftigt haben. Das Gesamtbild der unterschiedlich angelegten empirischen Studien lässt recht klar erkennen, dass der Rettungsschirm eine der dominierenden Metaphern im deutschen Krisendiskurs und offenbar auch ein spezifisch deutsches Sprachgebilde ist.