Search results for "Frisian"

showing 10 items of 12 documents

Frisian as an Endangered Language: An Overview

2019

The main goal of the paper is to answer the questions whether Frisian can be referred to as an endangered language and if it managed to survive the constant influence of the surrounding larger cultures and languages. The first point to be analyzed is the geographic distribution of Frisian. The second issue to be considered is the historical and present cultural and social status of the Frisian language. The third matter to be analysed is the lexical variety of Frisian language and its complexity, which made its survival possible. The article takes the diachronic perspective and expounds upon all the mentioned factors and their role in the preservation of Frisian until today. The paper prese…

Fishman’s Graded Intergenerational Disruption Scaleendangered languageslanguage contactFrisianAcademic Journal of Modern Philology
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Levelling Of I-Umlaut in Classical and Post-Classical Old Frisian Nouns

2022

The paper discusses and evaluates the extent of i-umlaut levelling in classical (ca. 1300–1400) and post-classical (ca.1400–1550) Old Frisian nouns. In terms of the methodology, the main goal of the analysis is to identify the quantitative relation between the incidence of i-umlauted and umlautless root vowels in the nominal declension paradigms. In order to understand and assess the process of levelling of i-umlaut in Old Frisian, three aspects that may have had an impact on the presence or absence of i-mutated vowels are taken into account, namely: the presence of the i-mutation trigger *-ī and *-j and *-i, the establishment of whether i-mutation is noticeable in the entire paradigm or it…

Linguistics and Languagenouns; levellingLiterature and Literary Theoryi-umlautpost-classical Old Frisianclassical Old FrisianLanguage and LinguisticsGema Online Journal of Language Studies
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Old Frisian skalk: A ‘Servant’ or a ‘Rogue’?

2017

The Old Frisian wordscalc, scalch, schalcis usually used in the sense of ‘servant, slave’. However, the word evidences a pejoration in meaning, being also attested in the Frisian written tradition in the sense of ‘ill-mannered person, villain, a bad guy’. The investigation of the occurrences ofskalk–along with a comparison of its Germanic cognates–will allow us to draw a picture of the semantic development of this word from medieval times to the Modern stage of the Frisian language. In the author’s opinion, the negative connotation ofskalkas an offensive epithet is the final result of a range of different causes, whose origin should be searched both in Frisian-Scandinavian contacts during t…

LiteratureOld Frisian laws servant slave rogue Vikingsbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectSettore L-FIL-LET/15 - Filologia GermanicaIndo-European languagesOffensiveGeneral MedicineMeaning (non-linguistic)language.human_languageGermanGeographylanguageViking AgeServantEpithetbusinessmedia_commonConnotationAmsterdamer Beiträge zur älteren Germanistik
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Glimpses of the Hereafter in the Late-Medieval Thet Freske Riim

2014

The article analyzes a passage of the narrative poem Thet Freske Riim, one of the few non-legal texts preserved in Old Frisian. The passage in question is a digression describing the Joys of Heaven and the Horrors of Hell, which so far has attracted little attention in the scholarly literature on medieval accounts of the hereafter. The representations of the afterlife and its realms circulating in Medieval Europe draw inspiration from a wide body of both orthodox and apocryphal literature on ecstatic dreams, of which one of the most influential work is the Visio Sancti Pauli or Apocalypse of Paul. The study aims to identify – in the examined passage – themes and features of otherworldly lit…

Old Frisian Descriptions of the Otherwolrld Eschatological LiteratureSettore L-FIL-LET/15 - Filologia Germanica
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Theological and doctrinal texts in the Old Frisian Thet Autentica Riocht

2015

The Frisian literary corpus is composed mostly by legal texts. However, interspersed in the law manuscripts, various texts of different nature are occasionally attested, several of which are of religious content. Among them, worthy of consideration are a number of short pieces devoted to theological and biblical topics, such as those contained in the so-called Thet autentica Riocht (fifteenth century): the Seven Virtues of the Mass, the Seven Things that God hates, the Ten Signs in the Host, the Three Unforgivable Sins, as well as a piece devoted to the benefits of confession. These texts share features with the Five Keys to Wisdom, a brief didactic treatise preserved in the First and Secon…

Old Frisian devotional literature Christian textsSettore L-FIL-LET/15 - Filologia Germanica
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Le iscrizioni runiche sullo sfondo della cultura Frisone altomedievale

2000

The study offers a critical edition of the Old Frisian runic corpus, together with a linguistic and philological analysis of the inscriptions examined, also in the light of their context of occurrence,

Old Frisian runes runic inscriptionsSettore L-FIL-LET/15 - Filologia Germanica
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The Criteria for the Formation of a Frisian Runic Corpus Revisited

1998

The Frisian corpus of runic inscriptions consists of about twenty items, some of which are very short, while other present several problems of legend and interpretation. On the other end, it is undeniable that the Frisian runic inscriptions constitute a uniform corpus with a recognizable identity that can be pinpointed through a series of specific criteria. In the present paper I enter the debate about the origin of the Frisian runic inscriptions, analysing the geographical, linguistical and epigraphic criteria identified by the previous research, providing whenever possible further and new elements, in order to strengthen the foundations of the Frisian runological tradition.

Old Frisian runic insriptions runological tradition runesSettore L-FIL-LET/15 - Filologia Germanica
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Kidnapping the Frisian

2017

The several sources documenting the events of the Viking Age in Frisia Magna emphasise the dramatic aspects of the Northern invasions. However, seen from a wider perspective, the Frisian-Scandinavian relations appear to be multifaceted and at times ambiguous. A number of Old Frisian law texts refer to the Viking practice of capturing and enslaving Frisian men, forcing them to fight on their side, and even sharing spoils with them. A Frisian who undergoes such an experience is called skalk, ‘servant, slave’, a sort of high-ranking servant. He enjoys special rights and even privileges. Such ambiguous status seems the result of the peculiar and not always straightforward interactions between F…

Old Frisian skalk Frisia Magna Viking AgeSettore L-FIL-LET/15 - Filologia Germanica
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Glossing the Old Frisian Psalter: Pragmatics and Competence

2014

The essay takes into examination the interlinear glosses in Old Frisian in the fragment of Psalter in ms. Groningen, Universiteitsbibliotheek 404. This is the oldest medieval Frisian fragmentary codex to survive and contains verses of Psalms XVII, XXVII, and XVIII, accompanied by glosses in the vernacular. This essay is the first lengthy study specifically devoted to the typology of the glosses themselves and their peculiarities (within the field of interlinear glosses). On close inspection, the OF glosses show a large internal coherence and individual quality. As far as the lexicon is concerned, the glosses feature a series of words belonging to the juridical lexicon, whereas other word-ch…

Settore L-FIL-LET/15 - Filologia GermanicaGeneral MedicinePragmaticsOld Frisian manuscript in-text glosses interlinear glosses lexicon typologyPsychologyCompetence (human resources)LinguisticsAmsterdamer Beiträge zur älteren Germanistik
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Il colore ‘blu’ nel medioevo frisone: afris. wēden, wēdan, wēdin

2022

The colour words have always been a fascinating topic of study for scholars of various disciplines, including linguists, philologists, psychologists, philosophers and anthropologists. A survey of the occurrences of the Old Frisian word wēden, wēdan, wēdin (cf. OE wǣden, OHG weit, presumably stemming from a Gmc *waizda-, waidīna-, a root meaning ‘woad, plant yielding blue dye’), might allow us to specify the various semantic fields covered by this lexeme, as well as the relevant contexts of use.

Settore L-FIL-LET/15 - Filologia Germanicacolour blue Frisian language
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