Kennings and variability: Corpus and structural views

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Kennings and variability : Corpus and structural views. / Wills, Tarrin.

I: European Journal of Scandinavian Studies, Bind 51, 09.04.2021, s. 11-25.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Wills, T 2021, 'Kennings and variability: Corpus and structural views', European Journal of Scandinavian Studies, bind 51, s. 11-25. https://doi.org/10.1515/ejss-2020-2024

APA

Wills, T. (2021). Kennings and variability: Corpus and structural views. European Journal of Scandinavian Studies, 51, 11-25. https://doi.org/10.1515/ejss-2020-2024

Vancouver

Wills T. Kennings and variability: Corpus and structural views. European Journal of Scandinavian Studies. 2021 apr. 9;51:11-25. https://doi.org/10.1515/ejss-2020-2024

Author

Wills, Tarrin. / Kennings and variability : Corpus and structural views. I: European Journal of Scandinavian Studies. 2021 ; Bind 51. s. 11-25.

Bibtex

@article{fcdaf19becef43d7ae13cbbebb24e5f0,
title = "Kennings and variability: Corpus and structural views",
abstract = "A casual examination of the skaldic corpus suggests that a very large proportion of kennings are unique, that is, the nouns that form a kenning are very unlikely to appear elsewhere as a kenning, even when grammatical variation is taken into account. This enormous productivity is due to the principle of variability and substitution in kennings. The phenomenon is discussed in Fidjest{\o}l{\textquoteright}s 1974 structural analysis of the kenning system and presented there as a reversal of the principle of linguistic economy. This paper investigates this phenomenon by quantitatively analysing the kenning corpus as recorded in the skaldic database, in order to identify matching kennings within the corpus. The results are broken down according to the complexity of the kennings in question and are then examined in relation to the structural framework of the kenning system. It is shown, firstly, that a relatively small number of kennings are repeated (10–12 % of kennings are repeated), but that there is a fairly high amount of repetition among simple kennings (at least 25 % of simple kennings are found elsewhere in the corpus), suggesting that the kenning system has quantitative similarities with other linguistic systems, albeit with a much higher level of variability.",
author = "Tarrin Wills",
year = "2021",
month = apr,
day = "9",
doi = "10.1515/ejss-2020-2024",
language = "English",
volume = "51",
pages = "11--25",
journal = "European Journal of Scandinavian Studies",
issn = "2191-9399",
publisher = "De Gruyter",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Kennings and variability

T2 - Corpus and structural views

AU - Wills, Tarrin

PY - 2021/4/9

Y1 - 2021/4/9

N2 - A casual examination of the skaldic corpus suggests that a very large proportion of kennings are unique, that is, the nouns that form a kenning are very unlikely to appear elsewhere as a kenning, even when grammatical variation is taken into account. This enormous productivity is due to the principle of variability and substitution in kennings. The phenomenon is discussed in Fidjestøl’s 1974 structural analysis of the kenning system and presented there as a reversal of the principle of linguistic economy. This paper investigates this phenomenon by quantitatively analysing the kenning corpus as recorded in the skaldic database, in order to identify matching kennings within the corpus. The results are broken down according to the complexity of the kennings in question and are then examined in relation to the structural framework of the kenning system. It is shown, firstly, that a relatively small number of kennings are repeated (10–12 % of kennings are repeated), but that there is a fairly high amount of repetition among simple kennings (at least 25 % of simple kennings are found elsewhere in the corpus), suggesting that the kenning system has quantitative similarities with other linguistic systems, albeit with a much higher level of variability.

AB - A casual examination of the skaldic corpus suggests that a very large proportion of kennings are unique, that is, the nouns that form a kenning are very unlikely to appear elsewhere as a kenning, even when grammatical variation is taken into account. This enormous productivity is due to the principle of variability and substitution in kennings. The phenomenon is discussed in Fidjestøl’s 1974 structural analysis of the kenning system and presented there as a reversal of the principle of linguistic economy. This paper investigates this phenomenon by quantitatively analysing the kenning corpus as recorded in the skaldic database, in order to identify matching kennings within the corpus. The results are broken down according to the complexity of the kennings in question and are then examined in relation to the structural framework of the kenning system. It is shown, firstly, that a relatively small number of kennings are repeated (10–12 % of kennings are repeated), but that there is a fairly high amount of repetition among simple kennings (at least 25 % of simple kennings are found elsewhere in the corpus), suggesting that the kenning system has quantitative similarities with other linguistic systems, albeit with a much higher level of variability.

U2 - 10.1515/ejss-2020-2024

DO - 10.1515/ejss-2020-2024

M3 - Journal article

VL - 51

SP - 11

EP - 25

JO - European Journal of Scandinavian Studies

JF - European Journal of Scandinavian Studies

SN - 2191-9399

ER -

ID: 260035893