[Lingtyp] An ideophone for cough?
JOO, Ian [Student]
ian.joo at connect.polyu.hk
Fri Mar 11 13:51:00 UTC 2022
Dear Rafaelle,
here are the translations of Korean 콜록콜록 khollok-khollok that I have retrieved from the Naver Dictionaries (dict.naver.com).
Japanese ごほんごほん, こんこん. gohon-gohon, kon-kon
Mandarin 喀喀 ,吭吭 ,咳咳 kākā, kēngkēng, kéké
Vietnamese sù sụ, khù khụ
Mongolian пөг пөг pög-pög
Indonesian krok krok
Thai โขลก ๆ, ค๊อก ๆ, แค๊ก ๆ khlôok khlôok, khóok khóok, khéek khéek
Hope this helps.
Also, if you are interested in ideophones and iconicity, please join our Facebook group on Iconicity:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/lingicon
We have a monthly Zoom seminar on Iconicity. You are welcome to share your work there.
From Uppsala,
Ian
On 11 Mar 2022, 2:22 PM +0100, Csilla Kász, M.A. <ckasz at isfas.uni-kiel.de>, wrote:
Hello,
The Hungarian counterpart of a fake cough is quite similar to the Finnish, but is usually said twice:
Köhöm-köhöm
the pronunciation is [køhøm]
Best,
Csilla
---
Csilla Kász
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Am 2022-03-11 14:06, schrieb Jussi Ylikoski:
Dear all,
[mˈm̥m], this discussion sounds interesting! For pronunciation and translations for ahem, see https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/ahem with the interlanguage links. I just added kröhöm<https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/kr%C3%B6h%C3%B6m> into the Finnish entry at https://fi.wiktionary.org/wiki/ahem.
Best,
Jussi
________________________________
Frá: Lingtyp <lingtyp-bounces at listserv.linguistlist.org> fyrir hönd David Gil <gil at shh.mpg.de>
Sent: föstudagur, 11. mars 2022 14:47
Til: lingtyp at listserv.linguistlist.org <lingtyp at listserv.linguistlist.org>
Efni: Re: [Lingtyp] An ideophone for cough?
Dear all,
Not exactly ideophones or coughing, but English has "harrumph" and "ahem" to denote a sort of fake cough intentionally produced to express disapproval and/or draw attention. (The two actually seem to differ in their status: whereas the former is kind of a regular verb, I don't think I've ever heard "ahem" pronounced — it seems to exist only in written form.)
Do other languages have similar forms?
David
On 11/03/2022 11:58, Raffaele Simone wrote:
Dear all,
working on a paper on ideophones and their place in grammar and lexicon I happened to wonder how things are concerning cough.
Romance languages and other which I am familiar with do not seem to have a standard ideophone for it and even less a stable an accepted written version of it.
Do you know languages that have an ideophone for cough and even more a way of indicating it in writing?
Thanks,
Raffaele
--
===============
Emeritus Professor, Università Roma Tre
Hon C Lund University
Membre de l'Académie Royale de Belgique
Chevalier de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres de France
Accademico della Crusca
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Attività e pubblicazioni // Activity and publications http://uniroma3.academia.edu/RaffaeleSimone
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David Gil
Senior Scientist (Associate)
Department of Linguistic and Cultural Evolution
Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology
Deutscher Platz 6, Leipzig, 04103, Germany
Email: gil at shh.mpg.de<mailto:gil at shh.mpg.de>
Mobile Phone (Israel): +972-526117713
Mobile Phone (Indonesia): +62-81344082091
________________________________
Frá: Lingtyp <lingtyp-bounces at listserv.linguistlist.org> fyrir hönd David Gil <gil at shh.mpg.de>
Sent: föstudagur, 11. mars 2022 14:47
Til: lingtyp at listserv.linguistlist.org <lingtyp at listserv.linguistlist.org>
Efni: Re: [Lingtyp] An ideophone for cough?
Dear all,
Not exactly ideophones or coughing, but English has "harrumph" and "ahem" to denote a sort of fake cough intentionally produced to express disapproval and/or draw attention. (The two actually seem to differ in their status: whereas the former is kind of a regular verb, I don't think I've ever heard "ahem" pronounced — it seems to exist only in written form.)
Do other languages have similar forms?
David
On 11/03/2022 11:58, Raffaele Simone wrote:
Dear all,
working on a paper on ideophones and their place in grammar and lexicon I happened to wonder how things are concerning cough.
Romance languages and other which I am familiar with do not seem to have a standard ideophone for it and even less a stable an accepted written version of it.
Do you know languages that have an ideophone for cough and even more a way of indicating it in writing?
Thanks,
Raffaele
--
===============
Emeritus Professor, Università Roma Tre
Hon C Lund University
Membre de l'Académie Royale de Belgique
Chevalier de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres de France
Accademico della Crusca
===============
Attività e pubblicazioni // Activity and publications http://uniroma3.academia.edu/RaffaeleSimone
_______________________________________________
Lingtyp mailing list
Lingtyp at listserv.linguistlist.org<mailto:Lingtyp at listserv.linguistlist.org>
http://listserv.linguistlist.org/mailman/listinfo/lingtyp
--
David Gil
Senior Scientist (Associate)
Department of Linguistic and Cultural Evolution
Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology
Deutscher Platz 6, Leipzig, 04103, Germany
Email: gil at shh.mpg.de<mailto:gil at shh.mpg.de>
Mobile Phone (Israel): +972-526117713
Mobile Phone (Indonesia): +62-81344082091
_______________________________________________
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