33.688, Calls: Applied Linguistics, Linguistic Theories, Pragmatics, Semantics, Cognitive Science / Clina (Jrnl)

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LINGUIST List: Vol-33-688. Mon Feb 21 2022. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 33.688, Calls:  Applied Linguistics, Linguistic Theories, Pragmatics, Semantics, Cognitive Science / Clina (Jrnl)

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Date: Mon, 21 Feb 2022 22:42:02
From: Beatriz de la Fuente Marina [fuentemarina at usal.es]
Subject: Applied Linguistics, Linguistic Theories, Pragmatics, Semantics, Cognitive Science / Clina (Jrnl)

 
Full Title: Clina 


Linguistic Field(s): Applied Linguistics; Cognitive Science; Linguistic Theories; Pragmatics; Semantics 

Subject Language(s): Spanish (spa)

Call Deadline: 15-Mar-2022 

Call for Papers:

Neology: at the crossroads between stability and renewal
Joaquín García Palacios, Miguel Sánchez Ibáñez and Nava Maroto (eds.)
 
Deadline for abstract submission (about 300 words) to revistaclina at usal.es:
March 15 2022.

Deadline for preselection of received abstracts: March 31 2022.
Deadline for article submission (selected abstracts only) via
https://revistas.usal.es/index.php/clina/login  (6,000-8,000 words): June 30th
2022.

Expected publication date: February 2023.
Languages: English, Spanish
 
Without lexical innovation, without a constant updating of the languages we
speak, they would lose their raison d'être: to enable us to name the realities
we live by. Neology is, therefore, a necessary phenomenon for the evolution of
languages and for their adaptation to the new concepts they refer to. It
brings together the tools and resources every language uses to generate new
units (morphological procedures, spelling adaptations conversions or
loan-wordings, among others) with the renovating impulse that drives the
constant appearance of new concepts to be named and translated, as well as
with the incessant exchange of information that takes place currently between
different languages. Neology constitutes a point of tension between diachrony,
which leads languages to their stabilization, and the synchronic drive for
lexical regeneration, which motivates linguistic change.

Neological processes are the leitmotiv of the next monographic issue of CLINA:
neologisms are lexical units in constant change and always in question, on the
verge of what is considered as linguistically acceptable. They hold a
fascinating paradox for anyone interested in languages and their intricacies:
even if they push them to the limit of their possibilities, to the abyss of
degradation, they are, at the same time, the fuel they need to survive. In
other words: a neologism is the element that forces the established language
to update itself. It is also a crucial nexus between languages, which allows
translators to set new bridges between languages and find out innovative
solutions for unprecedented searches of equivalences.  

This new issue of CLINA aims to address the phenomenon of neology from every
approach and perspective, particularly the following ones:
- Theoretical aspects of neology
- Criteria and approaches for the recognition and classification of neologisms
- Automatic neology processing
- Terminological neology
- Neology in diachrony
- Neology in multilingual environments
- Contrastive studies on neology in different languages
- Language policies and neology
- Sociolinguistic aspects of neology
- Cognitive and communicative aspects of neology
- Neology and technical translation
- Neology and terminological dependency
- Neology, translation and literary creation
- Neology and the media
- Neology and social networks




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