Development of non-arbitrary to the arbitrary iconic words in Javanese language
Onomatopoeic words in Javanese language are an evidence of the uniqueness of both the lingual aspects and the described facts. This study discussed the phenomenon of phonological and morphological language processing. It examined the derivation of the onomatopoeic root words of Javanese language...
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my-ukm.journal.116462018-05-06T14:12:47Z http://journalarticle.ukm.my/11646/ Development of non-arbitrary to the arbitrary iconic words in Javanese language Sunarya, Sumarlam, Widodo, Sahid Teguh Sri Marmanto, Onomatopoeic words in Javanese language are an evidence of the uniqueness of both the lingual aspects and the described facts. This study discussed the phenomenon of phonological and morphological language processing. It examined the derivation of the onomatopoeic root words of Javanese language into some form of the word as iconic formation. The data source covers the source language of local print media and another complementary source which was obtained from informants living in the regions of Surakarta and Yogyakarta. This study revealed the Ullman’s onomatopoeic classification of primary and secondary onomatopoeias. The primary onomatopoeic is sound imitations of referents, i.e. crowing, roaring, barking sounds, etc. The secondary onomatopoeia is the sound which arises beyond the occurring acoustic experience; they are sounds produced by movements and physical, and mental quality of an object. i.e. the word bruk (voice of falling heavy objects), prang (sound of a broken plate). The development of sound imitation icon as an icon causes a shift in the status of a root word form or onomatopoeic sound imitator to other states. Words like thuthuk [ṭuṭU?] ‘'beater', kethuk kempyang [kəәṭU? kəәmpjaŋ] 'typical instrument used in Gamelan', pethuk [pəәṭU?] 'coming across' and bathuk [baṭU?] 'forehead' were the derivative words which originated from the root word thuk [ṭuk] with the additional formative process, repetition on the root word, compounding, and reduplication. In the Javanese language, onomatopoeic words often have the same family with other words. Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 2017-08 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://journalarticle.ukm.my/11646/1/16292-58357-1-PB.pdf Sunarya, and Sumarlam, and Widodo, Sahid Teguh and Sri Marmanto, (2017) Development of non-arbitrary to the arbitrary iconic words in Javanese language. GEMA: Online Journal of Language Studies, 17 (3). pp. 137-151. ISSN 1675-8021 http://ejournal.ukm.my/gema/issue/view/999 |
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Onomatopoeic words in Javanese language are an evidence of the uniqueness of both the
lingual aspects and the described facts. This study discussed the phenomenon of phonological
and morphological language processing. It examined the derivation of the onomatopoeic root
words of Javanese language into some form of the word as iconic formation. The data source
covers the source language of local print media and another complementary source which
was obtained from informants living in the regions of Surakarta and Yogyakarta. This study
revealed the Ullman’s onomatopoeic classification of primary and secondary onomatopoeias.
The primary onomatopoeic is sound imitations of referents, i.e. crowing, roaring, barking
sounds, etc. The secondary onomatopoeia is the sound which arises beyond the occurring
acoustic experience; they are sounds produced by movements and physical, and mental
quality of an object. i.e. the word bruk (voice of falling heavy objects), prang (sound of a
broken plate). The development of sound imitation icon as an icon causes a shift in the status
of a root word form or onomatopoeic sound imitator to other states. Words like thuthuk
[ṭuṭU?] ‘'beater', kethuk kempyang [kəәṭU? kəәmpjaŋ] 'typical instrument used in Gamelan',
pethuk [pəәṭU?] 'coming across' and bathuk [baṭU?] 'forehead' were the derivative words
which originated from the root word thuk [ṭuk] with the additional formative process,
repetition on the root word, compounding, and reduplication. In the Javanese language,
onomatopoeic words often have the same family with other words. |
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Article |
author |
Sunarya, Sumarlam, Widodo, Sahid Teguh Sri Marmanto, |
spellingShingle |
Sunarya, Sumarlam, Widodo, Sahid Teguh Sri Marmanto, Development of non-arbitrary to the arbitrary iconic words in Javanese language |
author_facet |
Sunarya, Sumarlam, Widodo, Sahid Teguh Sri Marmanto, |
author_sort |
Sunarya, |
title |
Development of non-arbitrary to the arbitrary iconic words
in Javanese language |
title_short |
Development of non-arbitrary to the arbitrary iconic words
in Javanese language |
title_full |
Development of non-arbitrary to the arbitrary iconic words
in Javanese language |
title_fullStr |
Development of non-arbitrary to the arbitrary iconic words
in Javanese language |
title_full_unstemmed |
Development of non-arbitrary to the arbitrary iconic words
in Javanese language |
title_sort |
development of non-arbitrary to the arbitrary iconic words
in javanese language |
publisher |
Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia |
publishDate |
2017 |
url |
http://journalarticle.ukm.my/11646/1/16292-58357-1-PB.pdf http://journalarticle.ukm.my/11646/ http://ejournal.ukm.my/gema/issue/view/999 |
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