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Hipsterskie fashionistki keżualowo drinkują na klabingu w Lądku… English Borrowings in Informal Polish and Their Lexical Fields

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 October 2023

Anna Tereszkiewicz
Affiliation:
Jagiellonian University, Krakow
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Summary

This paper concerns English borrowings in informal Polish and presents their main lexical fields. Such borrowings constitute a vibrant and growing part of contemporary Polish, which reflects the expanding global influence of the English language. This influence is perceptible in the increasingly pervasive use of English in Poland, which indirectly affects the speech patterns of Polish speakers via borrowings, including informal language. In this paper, I attempt to answer two rather fundamental yet intriguing questions: What are English borrowings in informal Polish about? and Are they different from English borrowings in non-informal Polish? In so doing, I present a representative selection of these expressions, grouped into the main thematic categories called lexical fields. These categories are based on the preliminary analysis of expressions found in the Database of English Borrowings in Informal Polish, a sizable collection of citations collected from contemporary Polish sources such as the press, television, film, literature and conversations with Polish native speakers. The material ‒ which also served as the basis for much larger work on the subject (see Kowalczyk and Widawski 2019) ‒ has been collected over the last decade, and partially funded by grants from the Polish Ministry of Higher Education.

Introductory remarks

Let us briefly explain some of the key terms used in this paper. The term borrowing (or lexical borrowing) can be broadly defined as taking a word or phrase from one language into another or as the item so taken (McArthur 1992: 141). It is perhaps the most universally used “umbrella” term, firmly entrenched in linguistics (Durkin 2014: 3). An alternative term, loanword, is used more or less interchangeably with it and generally functions as its most common synonym (Steinmetz and Kipfer 2006: 303). However, it is slightly different in that it essentially refers to a borrowed word rather than a phrase or sentence (although its semantic scope is more inclusive in common usage). Needless to say, various terminological and typological classifications have been proposed (see, for instance, the classifications by Bloomfield 1933; Haugen 1950; Weinreich 1953; Fisiak 1961; Katamba 1996; Wohlgemuth 2009 or Kuźniak 2009) but these are beyond the scope of this paper.

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Languages in Contact and Contrast
A Festschrift for Professor Elżbieta Mańczak-Wohlfeld on the Occasion of Her 70th Birthday
, pp. 513 - 530
Publisher: Jagiellonian University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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