财富的尴尬:印欧语系中的“头”字

P. G̨asiorowski
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引用次数: 4

摘要

HEAD的概念反映在所有已知语言的基本词汇中;把头部看作是一个独特的、极其重要的身体部位,用一个简单的词来标记,这似乎是跨文化的普遍现象。由于其使用频率高和“基本概念”地位,意为“头”的词往往是历时稳定的,因此对比较重建很重要。根据几个没有争议的语系的数据估计,这些词的预期保留率与表示“心”或“脚”的词的保留率相当。另一方面,特定文化因素可能导致二次意义的扩散,文体标记的近义词的兴起,从而局部加速词汇演变。这似乎在印欧语系中反复发生,其中不仅最古老的可重建的“头”词*ḱreh₂-,而且次要的、特定分支的术语也经常被词汇替换。在印欧语中,“头部”一词的不寻常变化与其他几个身体部位概念的显著保守形成鲜明对比,如“眼睛”、“耳朵”、“牙齿”和“心脏”。在本文中,我们将试图识别在新同义词的出现和继承的“头”词的多义词发展中语义变化的循环模式。从最近的“具体化”研究中获得的见解将被用来解释观察到的趋势。
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The embarrassment of riches: ‘Head’ words in the Indo-European family
Abstract The notion of HEAD is reflected in the basic lexicon of all known languages; the identification of the head as a distinct and vitally important body part, labelled with a simplex word, seems to be a cross-cultural universal. Thanks to their high frequency of use and their “basic concept” status, words meaning ‘head’ tend to be diachronically stable and therefore important for comparative reconstruction. Their expected retention rate - as estimated on the basis of data from several uncontroversial language families - is on a par with words meaning ‘heart’ or ‘foot’. On the other hand, culture-specific factors may lead to the proliferation of secondary meanings, the rise of stylistically marked nearsynonyms, and consequently to locally accelerated lexical evolution. This seems to have happened repeatedly in the Indo-European family, in which not only the oldest reconstructible ‘head’ word, *ḱreh₂- but also secondary, branch-specific terms have often been subject to lexical replacement. This unusual variability of words for HEAD in Indo- European contrasts with the remarkable conservatism of words for several other bodypart concepts, such as EYE, EAR, TOOTH and HEART. In this paper, we shall attempt to identify recurrent patterns of semantic change in the emergence of new synonyms and the polysemic development of inherited ‘head’ words. Insights derived from recent studies of “embodiment” will be used to explain the observed tendencies.
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