Uwagi o jarmułce

Notes on Polish jarmułka ‘Jewish skullcap’ Polish jarmułka ‘Jewish skullcap’ is generally considered to be an old Turkish loanword. In Bohdan A. Struminsky’s 1987 article this etymology is contested and replaced with a Latin one. However, Struminsky failed to present convincing arguments against...

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Autor principal: Marek Stachowski
Formato: article
Lenguaje:DE
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Publicado: Ksiegarnia Akademicka Publishing 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/cf5f44242ff9470da23aacde5ffbce58
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:cf5f44242ff9470da23aacde5ffbce582021-11-27T12:58:24ZUwagi o jarmułce10.12797/LV.08.2013.15.111896-21222392-1226https://doaj.org/article/cf5f44242ff9470da23aacde5ffbce582021-05-01T00:00:00Zhttps://journals.akademicka.pl/lv/article/view/2915https://doaj.org/toc/1896-2122https://doaj.org/toc/2392-1226 Notes on Polish jarmułka ‘Jewish skullcap’ Polish jarmułka ‘Jewish skullcap’ is generally considered to be an old Turkish loanword. In Bohdan A. Struminsky’s 1987 article this etymology is contested and replaced with a Latin one. However, Struminsky failed to present convincing arguments against the Turkish origin of the Polish word and his Latin explanation does not seem absolutely perfect either. This article critically examines Struminsky’s study and provides specific arguments against the Turkish trail. The etymology and the evolution of both the guise and the meanings of Polish jarmułka appear to be more complicated than previously thought; thus, the present article should be looked on as picking up an interrupted discussion and, in addition, an invitation to reexamination of the Latin etymology and the semantic aspects of all explanations suggested so far. Marek StachowskiKsiegarnia Akademicka Publishingarticleetymologiahistoria kulturyŻydzijarmułkaLanguage. Linguistic theory. Comparative grammarP101-410DEENFRPLRULingVaria, Vol 8, Iss 15 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language DE
EN
FR
PL
RU
topic etymologia
historia kultury
Żydzi
jarmułka
Language. Linguistic theory. Comparative grammar
P101-410
spellingShingle etymologia
historia kultury
Żydzi
jarmułka
Language. Linguistic theory. Comparative grammar
P101-410
Marek Stachowski
Uwagi o jarmułce
description Notes on Polish jarmułka ‘Jewish skullcap’ Polish jarmułka ‘Jewish skullcap’ is generally considered to be an old Turkish loanword. In Bohdan A. Struminsky’s 1987 article this etymology is contested and replaced with a Latin one. However, Struminsky failed to present convincing arguments against the Turkish origin of the Polish word and his Latin explanation does not seem absolutely perfect either. This article critically examines Struminsky’s study and provides specific arguments against the Turkish trail. The etymology and the evolution of both the guise and the meanings of Polish jarmułka appear to be more complicated than previously thought; thus, the present article should be looked on as picking up an interrupted discussion and, in addition, an invitation to reexamination of the Latin etymology and the semantic aspects of all explanations suggested so far.
format article
author Marek Stachowski
author_facet Marek Stachowski
author_sort Marek Stachowski
title Uwagi o jarmułce
title_short Uwagi o jarmułce
title_full Uwagi o jarmułce
title_fullStr Uwagi o jarmułce
title_full_unstemmed Uwagi o jarmułce
title_sort uwagi o jarmułce
publisher Ksiegarnia Akademicka Publishing
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/cf5f44242ff9470da23aacde5ffbce58
work_keys_str_mv AT marekstachowski uwagiojarmułce
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