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On the Chinese resistance to lexical borrowing: a writing-driven self-purification system

Linguistics and Languages

On the Chinese resistance to lexical borrowing: a writing-driven self-purification system

L. Zhang

This paper by Liulin Zhang dives into the intriguing resistance of the Chinese language to lexical borrowing, exploring how its unique ideographic writing system shapes language ideology. Discover the complex relationship between writing and speech in this thought-provoking research that challenges conventional beliefs.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
The Chinese language is known for its resistance to lexical borrowing. Transliterations can hardly be retained in this language that use pre-existing characters to simply transcribe the pronunciation of the source word in the donor language. This exclusion can be attributed to the ideographic nature of Chinese characters. Given the stable graphic-meaning correspondence, novel use of characters is expected to be consistent with their usage in previous literature, while the association between the graphic form and the phonetic form has always been loose, rendering it meaningless to use characters as a mere phonetic representation. Here writing is having an effect on the assimilation of loanwords, and more generally, the purist language ideology, which runs counter to the traditionally assumed derivative position of writing, thus shedding light on the implicit effect of writing on language ideology.
Publisher
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Jan 03, 2024
Authors
Liulin Zhang
Tags
Chinese language
lexical borrowing
ideographic writing
graphic-meaning correspondence
language ideology
phonetic transcriptions
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