Jurnal Bahasa dan Sastra
Vol 9, No 1 (2021)

Indonesian vs. Bribri: Striking Lexical Similarities In Two Unrelated Languages

Haakon S. Krohn (Universidad de Costa Rica)



Article Info

Publish Date
02 Mar 2021

Abstract

Despite the fact that Indonesian and Bribri belong to two different language families and are spoken on opposite sides of the world, their lexicons contain many words that are strikingly similar. In this paper I anayze the origin of three word pairs from these languages that not only sound similar, but also have almost exactly the same meaning: (1) Indonesian kulit and Bribri kuö́lit ‘skin, hide, leather, crust, shell, bark, rind, peel’, (2) Indonesian kutu and Bribri kú̱ ‘louse’, and (3) Indonesian kupu-kupu and Bribri kua’kua ‘butterfly’. The intention is not to propose any genealogical link between the Austronesian and the Chibchan language families, but rather to show how phonological, morphological and semantic properties can converge in two unrelated languages and produce this kind of eye-catching similarities.

Copyrights © 2021






Journal Info

Abbrev

ibs

Publisher

Subject

Arts Humanities Languange, Linguistic, Communication & Media Social Sciences

Description

Language and Literature which including review of comparative literature, modern literature, creative expressions, new literary history, practice and theory of creative writing literature and language, methodologies of literature and language, Theories and practice of literary studies, linguistics, ...