Short-period evolution in EU legal texts: old and new terms, old and new concepts

Due to the ever-changing legal landscape of the European Union, the terminology used in EU documents is subject to constant formal and conceptual evolution. In this paper, a bilingual (Italian and English) corpus of equally authentic EU legal texts covering a time span of fifteen years (1998-2012)...

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Main Author: Katia Peruzzo
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Znanstvena založba Filozofske fakultete Univerze v Ljubljani (Ljubljana University Press, Faculty of Arts) 2013-12-01
Series:Linguistica
Online Access:https://revije.ff.uni-lj.si/linguistica/article/view/605
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spelling doaj-834ed0e6dd6543f6b8456c9401eb399f2020-11-25T00:03:40ZdeuZnanstvena založba Filozofske fakultete Univerze v Ljubljani (Ljubljana University Press, Faculty of Arts)Linguistica0024-39222350-420X2013-12-0153210.4312/linguistica.53.2.39-532236Short-period evolution in EU legal texts: old and new terms, old and new conceptsKatia Peruzzo0University of Trieste Due to the ever-changing legal landscape of the European Union, the terminology used in EU documents is subject to constant formal and conceptual evolution. In this paper, a bilingual (Italian and English) corpus of equally authentic EU legal texts covering a time span of fifteen years (1998-2012) and concerning the legal area of victims of crime is analysed from a diachronic perspective. The aim is to discuss the terminological changes observed in the corpus in the light of the classification of evolution phenomena proposed by Tartier (2003) and Picton (2011). In order to examine both formal and conceptual terminological evolution, the distinction between genotypes and phenotypes introduced by Sacco (1991) is applied to the terms identified in the corpus and the underlying concepts. The analysis of the EU corpus shows that the three categories proposed by Tartier (appearance, disappearance and stability) and the first three (novelty and obsolescence, implantation of terms and concepts, and centrality) of the four categories proposed by Picton for the terminology of space technologies also apply to the terms of the examined legal area. https://revije.ff.uni-lj.si/linguistica/article/view/605
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Katia Peruzzo
spellingShingle Katia Peruzzo
Short-period evolution in EU legal texts: old and new terms, old and new concepts
Linguistica
author_facet Katia Peruzzo
author_sort Katia Peruzzo
title Short-period evolution in EU legal texts: old and new terms, old and new concepts
title_short Short-period evolution in EU legal texts: old and new terms, old and new concepts
title_full Short-period evolution in EU legal texts: old and new terms, old and new concepts
title_fullStr Short-period evolution in EU legal texts: old and new terms, old and new concepts
title_full_unstemmed Short-period evolution in EU legal texts: old and new terms, old and new concepts
title_sort short-period evolution in eu legal texts: old and new terms, old and new concepts
publisher Znanstvena založba Filozofske fakultete Univerze v Ljubljani (Ljubljana University Press, Faculty of Arts)
series Linguistica
issn 0024-3922
2350-420X
publishDate 2013-12-01
description Due to the ever-changing legal landscape of the European Union, the terminology used in EU documents is subject to constant formal and conceptual evolution. In this paper, a bilingual (Italian and English) corpus of equally authentic EU legal texts covering a time span of fifteen years (1998-2012) and concerning the legal area of victims of crime is analysed from a diachronic perspective. The aim is to discuss the terminological changes observed in the corpus in the light of the classification of evolution phenomena proposed by Tartier (2003) and Picton (2011). In order to examine both formal and conceptual terminological evolution, the distinction between genotypes and phenotypes introduced by Sacco (1991) is applied to the terms identified in the corpus and the underlying concepts. The analysis of the EU corpus shows that the three categories proposed by Tartier (appearance, disappearance and stability) and the first three (novelty and obsolescence, implantation of terms and concepts, and centrality) of the four categories proposed by Picton for the terminology of space technologies also apply to the terms of the examined legal area.
url https://revije.ff.uni-lj.si/linguistica/article/view/605
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