The House as an Object of Naming in the Turkish Urban Onomasticon: Structural and Semantic Analysis

The article explores structural and semantic features of names of houses (oikodomonyms) in the Turkish language. The author proceeds from studying individual names’ motivations, contexts of their usage, and functional meaning (compared to the corresponding Russian designations) to the description of...

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Main Author: Оlga I. Klimkina
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: Izdatelstvo Uralskogo Universiteta 2020-04-01
Series:Voprosy Onomastiki
Subjects:
Online Access:http://onomastics.ru/sites/default/files/doi/10.15826/vopr_onom.2020.17.1.008.pdf
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spelling doaj-6be90f0fbff6441ab9679257ab0d002e2020-11-25T02:23:35ZrusIzdatelstvo Uralskogo UniversitetaVoprosy Onomastiki1994-24001994-24512020-04-0117115016710.15826/vopr_onom.2020.17.1.008The House as an Object of Naming in the Turkish Urban Onomasticon: Structural and Semantic AnalysisОlga I. Klimkina0Istanbul UniversityThe article explores structural and semantic features of names of houses (oikodomonyms) in the Turkish language. The author proceeds from studying individual names’ motivations, contexts of their usage, and functional meaning (compared to the corresponding Russian designations) to the description of the general urbanonymic formula of Turkish house names. Typically, the name’s affiliation to this class is indicated by the element apartment (borrowed from French) which is used in modern Turkish to refer to the buildings intended for rental housing. In Turkish grammar, appellative nouns occur in postposition and agree with the complemented onym that specifies the nominated object. With names of houses, when these derive from other titles — a personal name or a sea name, the onymic component is formed through appellative onymization or transonomization and can consist of one or several elements with a variable degree of complexity. The study identifies typical patterns of house naming: “possessive” names, names verbalizing the concept of ‘home,’ reference names formed by metonymic transfer, “panegyric” names with double nomenclature element, communicative “greeting” names. The cultural and historical context of Turkish oikodomonymy reveals itself in less common yet present “memorial” names commemorating remarkable events. Another peculiar group is “associative” house names conditioned by the appearance of the building. There is a strong influence of extralinguistic factors in the urban onomasticon of Instanbul: the names of houses reflect cultural and historical traditions of the people, features of the city’s natural landscape, the multi-ethnic composition of the population of the metropolis. The large scope of this category of onyms, the variety of semantic patterns and the functions it displays, as well as extensive, continuously replenished vocabulary, brings Turkish house names into a separate and well-established microsystem within the Turkish urban toponymicon.http://onomastics.ru/sites/default/files/doi/10.15826/vopr_onom.2020.17.1.008.pdfturkish languageturkish cultureonomasticsurban toponymic spacenames of houses (oikodomonyms)proprio-appellative lemmassemantic pattern
collection DOAJ
language Russian
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Оlga I. Klimkina
spellingShingle Оlga I. Klimkina
The House as an Object of Naming in the Turkish Urban Onomasticon: Structural and Semantic Analysis
Voprosy Onomastiki
turkish language
turkish culture
onomastics
urban toponymic space
names of houses (oikodomonyms)
proprio-appellative lemmas
semantic pattern
author_facet Оlga I. Klimkina
author_sort Оlga I. Klimkina
title The House as an Object of Naming in the Turkish Urban Onomasticon: Structural and Semantic Analysis
title_short The House as an Object of Naming in the Turkish Urban Onomasticon: Structural and Semantic Analysis
title_full The House as an Object of Naming in the Turkish Urban Onomasticon: Structural and Semantic Analysis
title_fullStr The House as an Object of Naming in the Turkish Urban Onomasticon: Structural and Semantic Analysis
title_full_unstemmed The House as an Object of Naming in the Turkish Urban Onomasticon: Structural and Semantic Analysis
title_sort house as an object of naming in the turkish urban onomasticon: structural and semantic analysis
publisher Izdatelstvo Uralskogo Universiteta
series Voprosy Onomastiki
issn 1994-2400
1994-2451
publishDate 2020-04-01
description The article explores structural and semantic features of names of houses (oikodomonyms) in the Turkish language. The author proceeds from studying individual names’ motivations, contexts of their usage, and functional meaning (compared to the corresponding Russian designations) to the description of the general urbanonymic formula of Turkish house names. Typically, the name’s affiliation to this class is indicated by the element apartment (borrowed from French) which is used in modern Turkish to refer to the buildings intended for rental housing. In Turkish grammar, appellative nouns occur in postposition and agree with the complemented onym that specifies the nominated object. With names of houses, when these derive from other titles — a personal name or a sea name, the onymic component is formed through appellative onymization or transonomization and can consist of one or several elements with a variable degree of complexity. The study identifies typical patterns of house naming: “possessive” names, names verbalizing the concept of ‘home,’ reference names formed by metonymic transfer, “panegyric” names with double nomenclature element, communicative “greeting” names. The cultural and historical context of Turkish oikodomonymy reveals itself in less common yet present “memorial” names commemorating remarkable events. Another peculiar group is “associative” house names conditioned by the appearance of the building. There is a strong influence of extralinguistic factors in the urban onomasticon of Instanbul: the names of houses reflect cultural and historical traditions of the people, features of the city’s natural landscape, the multi-ethnic composition of the population of the metropolis. The large scope of this category of onyms, the variety of semantic patterns and the functions it displays, as well as extensive, continuously replenished vocabulary, brings Turkish house names into a separate and well-established microsystem within the Turkish urban toponymicon.
topic turkish language
turkish culture
onomastics
urban toponymic space
names of houses (oikodomonyms)
proprio-appellative lemmas
semantic pattern
url http://onomastics.ru/sites/default/files/doi/10.15826/vopr_onom.2020.17.1.008.pdf
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