MNL

Tijdschrift voor Nederlandse Taal- en Letterkunde


ISSN 0040-7550
Omslag
Algemene informatie   Aflevering 125-3 (september 2009)   Archief   Binnenkort in dit tijdschrift   Richtlijnen voor auteurs
 

Renée van Bezooijen, Charlotte Gooskens & Sebastian Kürschner

Wat weet de Nederlander van de herkomst van Nederlandse woorden?

Abstract -- There have been quite a few studies exploring popular ideas and knowledge of variation in the Dutch language area. However, emphasis has always been on the geographic dimension, historic variation remaining underexposed. In the present article we present the results of an investigation which focussed on the knowledge that non-linguists possess of the origin of high-frequent words in present-day spoken Dutch. We hypothesized that loans of English origin would be better recognized than loans from other languages because they are more recent and have been less adapted to the Dutch language. This hypothesis was confirmed. Although words of English origin constitute a relatively small portion of the high-frequent part of the lexicon of present-day spoken Dutch, they are far better recognized than words of German, French and Latin origin.

TNTL 125-3 (september 2009), 324-344



 

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