
CIJNS en TIJNS, één belasting twee termen
Author(s) -
Pieter van Reenen
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
taal en tongval
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2215-1214
pISSN - 0039-8691
DOI - 10.5117/tet2014.2.reen
Subject(s) - german , vowel , linguistics , middle english , spelling , flemish , history , humanities , art , philosophy
CIJNS and TIJNS, one tax two terms. Origin and reciprocal influence, and the complex relation between CIJNS and ASSIJS\udDutch has two terms, CIJNS and TIJNS, for one type of tax. A third term, ACCIJNS, which in older Middle Dutch is ASSIJS denotes another type of tax. CIJNS is written with dozens of spellings, for instance cense, chens, cins, tsins, sise, tseys, cyes, whereas the spelling of TIJNS is more or less stable, as can be established on the basis of 13th and 14th century Middle Dutch corpora. It is argued that CIJNS and TIJNS come from Latin CENSUS without intervention of Romance, \udCIJNS, the southern form in Middle Dutch, via Old French C(H)ENS;\udTIJNS, the northern form of Middle Dutch, via Low German TINS and High German ZINS, the T having originated in Low German;\udthe many spelling variations of CIJNS are due to \udthe vowel of TIJNS which has influenced the vowel of CIJNS, for instance cens > cins;\udASSIJS which in one area has temporarily lead to the loss of the n in CIJNS, for instance sinse > sise, cijns > cijs; later in the same and an adjacent area the opposite trend has led to ACCIJNS, in which CIJNS has become a derivation;\udthe absorption of the [n] by the preceding vowel of Old French CENS resulting in pronunciations such as [sẽ:s] or [sẽjs], sometimes perceived by Flemish speakers without nasality as for instance [sejs] noted seys;\udthe begin group of Old French C(H)ENS reproduced in Dutch as for instance c, ch, ts, cs, tz, s and pronounced as [ts], [tʃ], [s], [ʃ]