DIFFERENCES AND CLASSIFICATION OF BORROWED AND LOAN WORDS: ANGLISICMS
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.69691/gb7zv714Keywords:
Borrowings, Adaptations, Anglicism, Loanwords, Anglosphere, Anglophilia, Anglophones, Anglicisation.Abstract
This article discusses the typology and differences of borrowed and loan words, particularly discussing the role of Anglicisms in linguistic context. These are English-language terms that have been borrowed and used in other languages; they are frequently used in relation to globalization and the growth of English as a universal language. During the adaptations, they have to change their morphological, semantic, and phonological features of the language they are borrowing.
References
Crystal, D. (2003). English as a global language (2nd.ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Crystal, David (2004). The language revolution. John Wiley Sons. ISBN 978-0-745-63313-8
English in Wales: diversity, conflict, and change – Page 19 Nikolas Coupland, Alan Richard Thomas – 1990 "‘Anglicisation’ is one of those myriad terms in general use which everyone understands and hardly anyone defines. It concerns the process by which non-English people become assimilated or bound into an...”
Fischer, Roswitha (2010). Anglicisms in Europe: Linguistic Diversity in a Global Context. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.p. 8
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