Covid-19 lexical innovation and morphological processes in the Jordanian context
Investigating the influence of English on neologism formation
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.17846/topling-2024-0007Keywords:
Arabic, Covid-19, English, lexicon, word-formation patternsAbstract
This article examines neologisms infiltrating into the lexicon of Arabic after the outbreak of the Covid‑19 pandemic. The data was based on four main resources: three Covid-19 discussion programmes broadcast by public and private TV stations in Jordan;the Jordan Ministry of Health’s daily Covid-19 statistical reports; local news reports; and linguistic landscape items on the Covid-19 pandemic. The unit of analysis was defined as every Covid-19-related coinage used after the pandemic. The study results show that a wide range of calque,adapted and non-adapted loanwords, andinterlingual hybrids were used to create new COVID-19 vocabulary. The study concludes that English is not only used for reasons of social prestige in Jordanian social settings, but it is also perceived as a utilitarian tool, as evidenced in the current study wherein English was used in a variety of word -formation mechanisms to express novel concepts and items due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
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Copyright (c) 2024 Yassir S. Al Suod, Omar I.S. Alomoush, Hassan Al-Momani
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.