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The basic colour terms of Lower Sorbian and Upper Sorbian and their typological relevance
Author(s) -
Andrew Hippisley,
Ian Davies,
Greville G. Corbett
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
studies in language
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.353
H-Index - 30
eISSN - 1569-9978
pISSN - 0378-4177
DOI - 10.1075/sl.32.1.04hip
Subject(s) - relevance (law) , space (punctuation) , linguistics , history , political science , philosophy , law
Berlin & Kay's basic colour term framework claims that there is an ordering in the diachronic development of languages' colour systems. One generalisation is that primary colours, WHITE, BLACK, RED, YELLOW, GREEN, BLUE, are lexicalised before derived colours, which are perceptual blends, e.g. ORANGE is the blend of YELLOW and RED. The colour systems of Lower Sorbian and Upper Sorbian offer an important typological contribution. It is already known that primary colour space can contract upon the emergence of a basic derived term; our findings indicate that derived categories also shift as colour systems develop. Tsakhur offers corroborating evidence

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