Slavic Legends and Folk Beliefs and Their Embodiment in Polish and English Names of Plants

Waniakowa (2012) advocates migration of plant names together with associated folk beliefs as in the case of ‘forget-me-not’. The abundance of names, concealed secrets and wandering nature of human mind, reference to political contexts and historical backgrounds as well as healing properties and...

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Main Author: Alina Szwajczuk
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cracow Tertium Society for the Promotion of Language Studies 2020-01-01
Series:Półrocznik Językoznawczy Tertium
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.tertium.edu.pl/index.php/JaK/article/view/156
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author Alina Szwajczuk
author_facet Alina Szwajczuk
author_sort Alina Szwajczuk
collection DOAJ
description Waniakowa (2012) advocates migration of plant names together with associated folk beliefs as in the case of ‘forget-me-not’. The abundance of names, concealed secrets and wandering nature of human mind, reference to political contexts and historical backgrounds as well as healing properties and occult phenomena render the symbol of a flower multidimensional. The paper is supposed to depict the manner in which the reality is perceived via the plant’s symbolism embodied in its name. In particular, these are Slavic legends and beliefs analyzed as semantic motivation of the plant’s denomination process that constitute the paper’s main thrust. The key assumption, however, is initial verification whether Slavic associations with plants are reflected in their names in the Polish language, and whether the migration of Slavic beliefs via migration of names into the Anglo-Saxon culture has taken place. Phytonyms are presented from a diachronic and synchronic perspective. Further, an integral element of the study shall be an attempt to translate old and contemporary Polish and English plant names.
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spelling doaj.art-2e4cfd6db0fd400ba2f5f8f695505c4a2022-12-21T20:15:01ZengCracow Tertium Society for the Promotion of Language StudiesPółrocznik Językoznawczy Tertium2543-78442543-78442020-01-015115016910.7592/Tertium2020.5.1.Szwajczuk136Slavic Legends and Folk Beliefs and Their Embodiment in Polish and English Names of PlantsAlina Szwajczuk0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8471-6668Uniwersytet SzczecińskiWaniakowa (2012) advocates migration of plant names together with associated folk beliefs as in the case of ‘forget-me-not’. The abundance of names, concealed secrets and wandering nature of human mind, reference to political contexts and historical backgrounds as well as healing properties and occult phenomena render the symbol of a flower multidimensional. The paper is supposed to depict the manner in which the reality is perceived via the plant’s symbolism embodied in its name. In particular, these are Slavic legends and beliefs analyzed as semantic motivation of the plant’s denomination process that constitute the paper’s main thrust. The key assumption, however, is initial verification whether Slavic associations with plants are reflected in their names in the Polish language, and whether the migration of Slavic beliefs via migration of names into the Anglo-Saxon culture has taken place. Phytonyms are presented from a diachronic and synchronic perspective. Further, an integral element of the study shall be an attempt to translate old and contemporary Polish and English plant names.https://journal.tertium.edu.pl/index.php/JaK/article/view/156proper namehistorical nameslegendsslavisetymologyonomastics
spellingShingle Alina Szwajczuk
Slavic Legends and Folk Beliefs and Their Embodiment in Polish and English Names of Plants
Półrocznik Językoznawczy Tertium
proper name
historical names
legends
slavis
etymology
onomastics
title Slavic Legends and Folk Beliefs and Their Embodiment in Polish and English Names of Plants
title_full Slavic Legends and Folk Beliefs and Their Embodiment in Polish and English Names of Plants
title_fullStr Slavic Legends and Folk Beliefs and Their Embodiment in Polish and English Names of Plants
title_full_unstemmed Slavic Legends and Folk Beliefs and Their Embodiment in Polish and English Names of Plants
title_short Slavic Legends and Folk Beliefs and Their Embodiment in Polish and English Names of Plants
title_sort slavic legends and folk beliefs and their embodiment in polish and english names of plants
topic proper name
historical names
legends
slavis
etymology
onomastics
url https://journal.tertium.edu.pl/index.php/JaK/article/view/156
work_keys_str_mv AT alinaszwajczuk slaviclegendsandfolkbeliefsandtheirembodimentinpolishandenglishnamesofplants