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Tracking the acceptance of neologisms in German: Psycholinguistic factors and their correspondence with corpus-linguistic findings

Linguistics and Languages

Tracking the acceptance of neologisms in German: Psycholinguistic factors and their correspondence with corpus-linguistic findings

S. Wolfer and A. Klosa-kückelhaus

Discover how neologisms borrowed from English are shaping the German language! This fascinating study by Sascha Wolfer and Annette Klosa-Kückelhaus reveals that younger generations embrace these English influences more readily than their predecessors. Dive into the implications of this psycholinguistic experiment and challenge your assumptions about language evolution!... show more
Abstract
Neologisms, i.e., new words or meanings, are finding their way into everyday language use all the time. In the process, already existing elements of a language are recombined or linguistic material from other languages is borrowed. But are borrowed neologisms accepted similarly well by the speech community as neologisms that were formed from "native" material? We investigate this question based on neologisms in German. Building on the corresponding results of a corpus study, we test the hypothesis of whether "native" neologisms are more readily accepted than those borrowed from English. To do so, we use a psycholinguistic experimental paradigm that allows us to estimate the degree of uncertainty of the participants based on the mouse trajectories of their responses. Unexpectedly, our results suggest that the neologisms borrowed from English are accepted more frequently, more quickly, and more easily than the "native" ones. These effects, however, are restricted to people born after 1980, the so-called millennials. We propose potential explanations for this mismatch between corpus results and experimental data and argue, among other things, for a reinterpretation of previous corpus studies.
Publisher
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Sep 01, 2023
Authors
Sascha Wolfer, Annette Klosa-Kückelhaus
Tags
neologisms
English
German language
psycholinguistic experiment
language evolution
corpus study
participant uncertainty
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