Borrowing iconic words: Loss, transfer, and reinvention of depiction

iconicity
ideophones
onomatopoeia
expressives
borrowing
typology
[2024-2027] Is borrowability negatively correlated with iconicity?
Published

November 1, 2024

Map of the sample in this project

Project description

Iconicity is a fundamental aspect of language. Words are iconic when their forms reveal something about their meaning, e.g., “woof” ‘sound of a dog barking’, “zigzag” ‘running while alternating from side to side’. Iconic words can be found in any natural language. Non-iconic words can also display iconicity (e.g. size sound symbolism), especially when they belong to the core vocabulary—words that resist borrowing into other language families. It has been hypothesized that iconicity is negatively correlated with borrowability. Yet, this hypothesis has not been tested on iconic words.

The BORROWING ICONIC WORDS project develops two measures (phonosemantic index, borrowability index) to gauge the universality of form-meaning mappings in iconic words, and how borrowable they are, in order to study the relation between iconicity and borrowability. The project first constructs a large-scale typological database (“Depicticon”) and then applies the two measures to it. BORROWING ICONIC WORDS devotes special attention to iconic lexicons to the case study of the East and Mainland Southeast Asia linguistic area.The project situates the borrowing of iconic words at the crossroads between linguistic typology, cognitive effects, and socio-cultural factors.

Members involved

My role in the project

I obtained this project as a senior postdoctoral fellow of the FWO.

Outputs

The project is currently being carried out.

Want to contribute?

Please contact met at thomas[DOT]vanhoey[AT]kuleuven[DOT]be

Basic info

FWO 2024

Number: FWO K1AFE24N

Fonds voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek
KU Leuven