Orð og tunga - 01.06.2013, Side 132

Orð og tunga - 01.06.2013, Side 132
122 Orð og tunga Berlin and Kay (1969:2) determined the existence of eleven basic color terms that match all of the four characteristics: white, black, red, green, yellow, blue, brown, pink, purple, orange, and grey. Their conclusions for the establishment of an evolutionary sequence and the different language stages are summarized in Table 2. i white black II III IV V VI red z green yellow > ellow Si þjue brown -» -» green z VII purple pink orange grey Table 2. The introduction ofbasic color terms into a language, according to Berliti and Kay (1969). According to Berlin and Kay (1969), all languages can be assigned to one - and only one - of the seven stages at a certain point in a language's development.1 Concerning stage VII, Berlin and Kay (1969:21-22) note that "the remaining basic categories, purple, pink, orange, and grey, are quickly added to the lexicon and ... in no par- ticular order." They further explain that "[s]tage VII systems include all eight-, nine-, ten-, and eleven-term systems" (1969:22). Kirsten Wolf (2006:189; 2009:223; 2010:110) maintains that Old Norse-Icelandic is an early stage VII language with eight basic color terms: svartr, hvítr, rauðr, grænn, gulr, blár, brúnn, and grár. She notes (2006:187; see also 2010:110) that a ninth basic color term, bleikr (for pink), has been added to the color lexicon in Modern Icelandic, which in Old Norse-Icelandic denoted simply a light color or light shade of color as in "pale," "wan," "bleached," "blond," "fair," or "light- colored."2 In accordance with Berlin and Kay's definition, Modern Ice- landic would, therefore, be a stage VII language with nine basic color terms, lacking basic color terms for purple and orange (see also Pois- son 2011:22, 26).3 Jackson Crawford (2011), however, argues convinc- ingly that the Icelandicfjólublár 'blue like a violet/ commonly used for purple, should be considered a basic color term despite its compound 1 Berlin and Kay's study and evolutionary sequence of color-terms are certainly not undisputed and have been revised since the publication of Basic Color Terms (1969). For critiques, see e.g., Hickerson 1971; Witkowski and Brown 1977. 2 For a more detailed discussion of bleikr in Old Norse-Icelandic, see Wolf 2005. 3 Wolf (2010:110) mentions that "UUa (purple) ... has very recently entered the lan- guage, and órans (orange) is in the process of entering the language." Jackson Crawford and Susanne Arthur's (née Fahn) research on these two color terms, however, has since shown that this statement may have to be revised (see below for órans and Crawford 2011 for lilla).
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