[Ads-l] Albanians
Laurence Horn
laurence.horn at YALE.EDU
Thu Feb 19 15:21:41 UTC 2015
Wonder if the first vowel would disambiguate in the spoken language. Ah, yes, so saith OED, at least in the primary pronunciation with open /O-/. There's also Albanian, n.3 and adj.1, another new one on me:
Of or relating to Scotland or its people; Scottish. Chiefly with reference to the time prior to the Scottish Wars of Independence (1296–1357), in later use often in relation to the Scots (Scot n.1 1) who settled in what is now western Scotland.
Presumably they'd have been recognized as British but not as English...
LH
On Feb 19, 2015, at 10:09 AM, Joel S. Berson wrote:
> "Following the French and Indian War, Albanians believed themselves to be British, but visiting Britons did not recognize them as fellow countrymen."
>
> Since this is the first sentence of the description of a talk titled "Degrees of Britishness: The People of Albany, New York, and Questions of Cultural Community Membership, 1763--1775", I suffered a moment of dislocation. But the next sentence brought me back across the ocean:
>
> "New World Dutch architecture, the Albany Dutch dialect, and the Dutch Reformed Church contributed to the British view of the Albanians as inter-imperial foreigners: subjects who lived within the British empire but stood outside of the British cultural community."
>
> And I find it has a long history, even if not as long as in the Caucasuses* -- "Albanian, n.4", "A native or inhabitant of Albany, New York State", from 1689.
>
> * Not to be confused with Secaucus, which is not close to Albany.
>
> Joel
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