Item sets
Title
eng
Various interpretations of the term origin in the description of given name systems
Author
Issue
Publisher
Eötvös Lorán University, Faculty of Humanities See all items with this value
Date issued
2020
Place of publication
Page start
66
Page end
75
Language
Identifier
Subject
eng
onomastics
eng
etymology
eng
categorization
eng
theory
eng
given names
eng
origin of names
eng
sources of names
Document type (Getty AAT)
Domain (Getty AAT)
Abstract
eng
The term origincan be understood in several ways with regard to given names. For instance, at least four interpretations coexist in the Hungarian onomastic literature: (1) the language in which the name was formed or from which it was borrowed (these two categories frequently do not coincide with each other), (2) the method through which the name entered the name stock (by category change –e.g. from common noun to proper name–, name-building, revival or recreation of long-forgotten names, borrow-ingor translation of foreign names, etc.), (3) the source of the name (e.g. the Bible, martyrologies, literary works), (4) the relation of the name to the Christian name stock (saint or profane). As the cate-gories created based on these points of view do not overlap, merging anyof these approaches leads to misunderstandings not only in academic discourse but also in the public sphere. Finally, it should also be considered that everyday categorisation does not work on scientific grounds. Consequently, the lay classification of the linguistic origin of a name may differ from the scientific categorisation. The aim of this paper is to create a theoretical model –by separating the above-mentioned points of view –for the proper description of given name systems by origin, based on the contemporary Hungarian given name stock. Due to the similarities between the given name stocks of Christian peoples (and –a certainextent –that of other cultures), the model will hopefully also be useful for the description of various national given name stocks.