Loading...
How Yiddish Polonisms may uncover Iranian, Turkic and other Asian speech in the White Croat State in Galicia
Wexler, Paul
Wexler, Paul
Citations
Altmetric:
Abstract
Govorci jidiša so kot trgovci na Svilni poti med 9. in 13. stoletjem prevzeli kakšnih pet tisoč afrazijskih, zlasti perzijskih jezikovnih posebnosti. Na Poljskem so se judovski govorci, ki so bili predvsem iranskega izvora, najprej naselili blizu ali znotraj galicijske Bele Hrvaške, ki je razpadla do 10. stoletja. Veliko nezapisanih iranskih in turkotatarskih vplivov v poljskem jidišu so nato prekrili polonizmi, ki v obliki in pomenu spominjajo na prvotno iransko in turkotatarsko izrazje. Članek se trudi raziskati, koliko polonizmov v poljskem in ukrajinskem jidišu (pravzaprav ‘prikritih irano-turcizmov’) lahko obnovi podobo izumrle iranščine in turkotatarščine, govorjene na slovanskih in germanskih tleh. Druge možnosti za zdaj ni.
As traders on the Silk Roads from the 9–13th centuries, Yiddish speakers acquired about 5,000 Afro-Asian, mainly Persian, linguistic components. In Poland, these Jews, largely of Iranian origin themselves, first settled in or near the Galician White Croat State, which disappeared by the 10th century. As unwritten Iranian and Turkic became obsolete, many such influences, also found in Polish Yiddish, came to be replaced by Polonisms, that resembled the original Iranian and Turkic terms in form and meaning. The present paper will explore how many Polonisms in Polish and Ukrainian Yiddish (essentially “covert Irano Turkisms”) can reconstruct aspects of the extinct Iranian and Turkic once spoken in Slavic and German territories. So far, there is no other means available to us to accomplish this task.
Description
Date
2022-04-15
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Maribor, Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures
Collections
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Keywords
Poljski jidiš, Iranščina, Turkotatarščina, Kitajščina, Stari judovski jeziki, ‘Lingvistika Svilne poti’, Polish Yiddish, Iranian, Turkic, Chinese, Old Jewish languages, “Silk Road linguistics”
Citation
Wexler P. (2022). How Yiddish Polonisms may uncover Iranian, Turkic and other Asian speech in the White Croat State in Galicia. Slavia Centralis, 15(1), 71–105. Retrieved from https://journals.um.si/index.php/slaviacentralis/article/view/1844