Current issues of linguistics
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It is fascinating to observe how regular sound changes obscure original sound-meaning
correlation of imitative words on concrete examples. The modern word denoting the sound we
produce in response to somebody’s joke is
to laugh.
It comes down to Old English hlehhan,
which was more apt for mimicking the sound we hear as it contained a velar fricative that had
acoustic characteristics more suitable for imitation. The question is, how many of the Old
English iconic words had lost their expressiveness due to the numerous sound changes before
becoming obsolete and replaced by new – exact and vivid – iconic formations?
On the whole, imitative words differ fundamentally from the rest of the vocabulary by the
very principle of their coinage. Being iconic elements in a predominantly symbolic system they
change in the course of its evolution perhaps to the greater extend then the rest of the lexicon, as
not only the usual patterns of meaning
development affect them, but also the regular sound
changes of the language. A brief comparative glance at the Old and Modern English imitative
vocabulary suggests that we are possibly dealing with two completely different word sets at
these time periods, and that the present-day system of sound-denotation tells us but very little
about the ancient one.
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