Repeated Words Auteur du fil: Hipyan Nopri
| Hipyan Nopri Indonésie Local time: 06:38 anglais vers indonésien + ...
Hello Fellow Translators, I am just curious about the existence of repeated words in other languages. In Indonesian (Bahasa Indonesia), repeated words usually function to pluralize noun. Example: buku (a book) buku-buku (books) pohon (a tree) pohon-pohon (trees) jalan (a street) jalan-jalan (streets) bapak (a father) bapak-bapak (fathers) The different rules of pluralization between English and Indoensian are ofte... See more Hello Fellow Translators, I am just curious about the existence of repeated words in other languages. In Indonesian (Bahasa Indonesia), repeated words usually function to pluralize noun. Example: buku (a book) buku-buku (books) pohon (a tree) pohon-pohon (trees) jalan (a street) jalan-jalan (streets) bapak (a father) bapak-bapak (fathers) The different rules of pluralization between English and Indoensian are often considered as one of the difficulties in learning English. Students are often faced with great challenges during writing tasks. Therefore, particularly among junior high school students, it is not surprising to find out the following cases: 1. "Father-father and mother-mother," (Bapak-bapak dan ibu-ibu), when it should be "Ladies and gentlemen," in English. 2. "New-new this," (Baru-baru ini), when it should be "Recently," in English. 3. "Eye-eye" (Mata-mata), when it should be "Spy" in English. 4. "Shy-shy" (Malu-malu), when it should be "Shy" in English. and many more. Your responses are greatly appreciated. Best Regards Hipyan Nopri ▲ Collapse | | | sarahjeanne (X) Brésil Local time: 20:38 portugais vers anglais + ... Basque Spanish | Jan 22, 2007 |
In Bilbao, when people want to make a superlative they say the word twice. If something is very big it's grande grande (big big). Or if something is really good it's bueno bueno (good good). My Spanish philology and linguistics teacher told me that it's common throughout the Spanish Basque Country. | | | Alan R King Local time: 01:38 basque vers anglais + ... In memoriam Reduplication | Jan 22, 2007 |
Hipyan Nopri, What you describe is an example of the phenomenon referred to in linguistic terminology as "reduplication". This is defined as follows in A Dictionary of Grammatical Terms in Linguistics by R.L. Trask: "Reduplication: The morphological phenomenon in which some morphological material is repeated within a single form for lexical of grammatical purposes." For a fuller description of the phenomenon you may like to look at the article of Reduplicat... See more Hipyan Nopri, What you describe is an example of the phenomenon referred to in linguistic terminology as "reduplication". This is defined as follows in A Dictionary of Grammatical Terms in Linguistics by R.L. Trask: "Reduplication: The morphological phenomenon in which some morphological material is repeated within a single form for lexical of grammatical purposes." For a fuller description of the phenomenon you may like to look at the article of Reduplication in Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reduplication). Yours Alan ▲ Collapse | | | transparx États-Unis Local time: 19:38 anglais vers italien + ... very interesting! | Jan 22, 2007 |
Hipyan Nopri wrote: I am just curious about the existence of repeated words in other languages. I was aware that in some languages this was the rule for pluralization, but didn't know that Bahasa Indonesia was one such language. In Calabrian, one of the dialects spoken in Southern Italy, reduplication has quantification force. "casi-casi" means "from house to house," that is, "to every house." Note, however, that "casi" is already plural. "paisi-paisi" that is "town-town" means "all over (the) town." In addition, we reduplicate the verb to form free relatives. An illustration of this phenomenon is the following: "Aundi vaju vaju, u viju" where I-go go him see = Wherever I go, I see him. This construction is actually also found in informal standard Italian (dove vado vado, lo vedo). However, while in Italian this structure is very colloquial ("dovunque vada" = "wherever I go[subjunctive]" is, in fact, the preferred form), in Calabrian -and perhaps in other varieties- reduplicating the verb is the only way to construct free relatives.
[Edited at 2007-01-22 17:29] | |
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transparx États-Unis Local time: 19:38 anglais vers italien + ...
...note that syntactic reduplication is much more widespread than people often think, especially in spoken language. There now exists a good body of literature on this fascinating topic. Even in English, people say things like "I don't like like it!" In this case, reduplication is used to show emphasis. | | | Melanie Nassar États-Unis Local time: 02:38 allemand vers anglais + ...
In colloquial Arabic, adjectives are often repeated to express intensity. For example shob shob (hot hot) means it's very hot (weather), foq foq (high high) means at the very top. Shwayya (a little) so shwayya shwayya means slowly, carefully (little by little). This extends to the colors of course, akhdar akhdar (really green), bringing to mind the "green green grass of home" which I miss sometimes, but not the mowing of same. | | | Hipyan Nopri Indonésie Local time: 06:38 anglais vers indonésien + ... AUTEUR DU FIL
for your responses. Thank you, Alan, for the really useful link. You all have widened my insight into the phenomenon of lexical reduplication. It appears that the phenomenon is found in several languages of the world, not only Asian but also European languages. In my country, it often interferes with student's understanding of English nouns, particularly plural nouns. The sample funny cases I quoted above are commounly found among junior high school stude... See more for your responses. Thank you, Alan, for the really useful link. You all have widened my insight into the phenomenon of lexical reduplication. It appears that the phenomenon is found in several languages of the world, not only Asian but also European languages. In my country, it often interferes with student's understanding of English nouns, particularly plural nouns. The sample funny cases I quoted above are commounly found among junior high school students when they are asked to write a piece of writing. However, during my study at the university, the same cases were not surprising either. I wonder if the same intereference happens to learners of other languages. ▲ Collapse | | | To report site rules violations or get help, contact a site moderator: You can also contact site staff by submitting a support request » Repeated Words Protemos translation business management system | Create your account in minutes, and start working! 3-month trial for agencies, and free for freelancers!
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