Orð og tunga - 01.06.2015, Qupperneq 29

Orð og tunga - 01.06.2015, Qupperneq 29
Veturliði G. Óskarsson: Loanwords with the prefix be- 17 tury, Vol. 1, p. 50). It has also another meaning in Icelandic, wholly na- tive, which Guðmundur Finnbogason coyly hints at with the words "special reasons", namely 'membrum virile'. More examples of twentieth-century criticism against words of this kind can be found; a well-known one is in a satirical article from 1955 by the chief medical officer for Iceland, Dr. Vilmundur Jónsson (1889-1972), where he, mockingly, recommends the words begrip 'concept', beskyn 'understanding' and bevís 'proof' (Dan. begreb, skon, bevis) instead of native Icelandic words (Vilmundur Jónsson 1955:6). Interestingly, Icel. begrip is nowhere to be found in available sources (cf. OH's collections, and timarit.is), even if the corresponding verb begrípa 'understand' occurs once in a text from the early nineteenth century (and a few times in novels from the mid- and late nineteenth century, used to mimic Danish slang); and the word beskyn has no direct Danish model at all. According to the two professors, Sigurður Nordal and Guðmund- ur Finnbogason, both heavily engaged in language planning, words with this foreign prefix had more or less fallen out of use by around 1930, but they imply that at least some such words were common shortly before that. Their first remark, that such words were out of use, is fairly easy to check, both by looking for them in dictionaries and by comparing present-day Icelandic. The second statement, that the words had been common shortly before they wrote their texts, is maybe more problematic and would need a detailed investigation. 3 be-/bí-words in nineteenth century Icelandic There is hardly much need to comment at length on why these words annoyed Icelandic language purists, or why they virtually disap- peared from the language. The most plausible explanation is that such obvious loanwords fell prey to the language purification of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It is a well-known fact that in the eyes of the Icelandic patriots of the 19th century, and the lan- guage purists of the following century, an uncorrupted and "clean" language, without younger loanwords, symbolized the state of the art before foreign kings gained control over Iceland in the thirteenth century and later. The loanwords were seen as the "dirt" that had contaminated the Icelandic language and symbolized the foreign in- fluence that was important to fight against and eventually get rid of.
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